This a great article that will uplift your spirits!
Jennifer Rubin is a journalist and lawyer who was hired by The Washington Post to be its conservative columnist. But Trump radicalized her, and she became a leading voice for liberal policies. After Jeff Bezos decided to placate and woo Trump, she resigned her job and started a new and wildly popular blog called “The Contrarian,” where she and other brilliant writers gathered to critique the madness of MAGA.
She recently posted an optimistic analysis of American politics. Despite the gerrymandering, despite horrible court decisions, Democrats are in a great position to wash the MAGA stain out of the nation’s government.
It’s the most optimistic piece I’ve read in a long while, and I think you will enjoy it too.
Rubin writes:
In a span of less than two weeks, the U.S. Supreme Court (contravening the text and intent of the post-Civil War amendments and decades of court precedent) and the Virginia State Supreme Court (overturning the will of Virginia voters and inventing a new definition of “election”) have bulldozed through the electoral landscape to slant the 2026 midterm playing field in Republicans’ favor.
In Louisiana v. Callais, the U.S. Supreme Court demolished 60 years of progress in voting rights, robbed Black and Hispanic communities of the power to elect representatives of their own choosing, and aimed to decimate the ranks of non-white U.S. House members, state legislators, and local officials. This is nothing short of an attempt to reimpose white supremacy.

Voting rights legal guru Rick Hasen wrote:
This decision will bleach the halls of Congress, state legislatures, and local bodies like city councils, by ending the protections of Section 2 of the act, which had provided a pathway to assure that voters of color would have some rudimentary fair representation. It’s the culmination of the life’s work of Chief Justice John Roberts and Samuel Alito, who have shown persistent resistance to the idea of the United States as a multiracial democracy, and a brazen willingness to reject Congress’ judgment that fair representation for minority voters sometimes requires race-conscious legislation…. It protects Alito’s core constituency: aggrieved white Republican voters.
As infuriating, partisan, and legally unsound as these rulings are, they are not the final word on either the midterms or the future of our multi-racial democracy.
The Midterms
Even with the loss in Virginia, Democrats’ five-seat pick up in California should more than counteract the original Texas re-redistricting (where two of the five seats Republicans sought to steal may well go to Democrats). And despite the Virginia decision, Democrats may still pick up one to two more seats under Virginia’s old map. The net pickup for Republicans currently is less than ten before Democrats pursue their own redistricting in New York, Illinois, Colorado, and Maryland.
However, even with the advantage of, say, a dozen rigged seats, Republicans are unlikely to keep the House majority. Since 2024, Democrats have swung the electorate substantially in their direction, over-performing in comparison to Kamala Harris in 193 of 226 state legislative races, by 20 points in some cases. On average, Democrats are doing more than 10 points better than they did in 2024. (Brookings’ William A. Galston wrote: “In the six special elections for the House conducted in 2025-2026, the swing toward Democratic candidates averaged about 15 points, while the swing toward Democratic gubernatorial candidates in New Jersey and Virginia averaged 14 points.”)
More than 20 Republican House seats were won by less than 10 points in 2024; 43 Republicans won by less than 15%. Given the electoral shift, Democrats’ list of targeted seats expands each week.
The New York Times reported that gerrymandering “tells only part of the story” about the midterms. While “Democrats could end up losing at least half a dozen safe seats, and possibly more,” depending on new maps drawn in Southern states, Republicans face gale-force “headwinds” thanks to Donald Trump’s atrocious approval numbers, his reviled Iran war, soaring gas and other consumer prices, snatching away healthcare coverage from millions, disaffection of Hispanic voters, and rampant corruption.
In short, gerrymandering, however outrageous, will not be enough to save Republicans if Democrats generate huge turnout, especially among those voters enraged that they have been stripped of voting power. (As Hungary demonstrated, a determined opposition can overcome a raft of unfair impediments imposed by a corrupt, unpopular regime.)
Democrats, independents, and disaffected Republicans know that the MAGA cult has no message — which is why MAGA lawmakers and courts must rig the election to cement white supremacy. That’s all they’ve got.
Democrats have their targets
The enormity of reversing 60 years of progress on voting rights necessitates a new era of intense organizing and public education — a new civil right movement to counter MAGA’s court-imposed Jim Crow. That effort kicks off with a grassroots National Day of Action on Saturday, May 16, in Alabama. Organizers declared, “The dismantling of the Voting Rights Act is a reminder that we have unfinished business. The fight is ours and we are going to finish it.” Scores of democracy groups, faith-based organizations, and civil rights organizations will rally to oppose Jim Crow redistricting and to support multi-racial democracy.
The goal: Democrats must win, and win big, in 2026 and 2028. Senate seats, governorships, and other statewide offices cannot be gerrymandered. A massive registration and turnout-the-vote operation must expand deep into Republican areas, appealing to disgruntled independents and Republicans while firing up the base. Democrats will need a broad, inclusive electoral coalition to pursue bold reform. As former attorney general Eric Holder likes to say, progressives “need to be comfortable with acquiring power and using power.”
What then? If Democrats come out of the 2028 election with House and Senate majorities, and the presidency, they will have all the motivation and tools required to reverse the slide into Jim Crow, beginning with substantial reform of the discredited Supreme Court. The MAGA justices’ willful misreading of the Voting Rights Act and the Constitution to concoct a “color blind” interpretation of voting rights (coupled with their monstrous expansion of executive power and abuse of the emergency docket) should unify democracy defenders on the urgency of Supreme Court reform through court expansion, term limits, revised appellate jurisdiction, and ethics reform.
Election law guru Rick Hasen argued:
The Supreme Court itself has shown itself to be the enemy of democracy. If and when Democrats retake control of the political branches, it will be incumbent on them not only to write new voting legislation protecting minority voters and all voters in the ability to participate fairly in elections that reflect the will of all the people. They will also have to consider reform of the Supreme Court itself.
With the election of aggressive Senate Democrats running in 2026 and 2028, Democrats should have little trouble carving out a filibuster exception, especially if they win by large margins that affirm voters’ rejection of MAGA assault on pluralistic democracy.
In addition to reforming the MAGA Supreme Court, a myriad of solid proposals for undoing the damage wrought by Callais include: state voting rights’ protections, a federal statute that requires nonpartisan redistricting, proportional representation, and a constitutional amendmentguaranteeing the right to vote. Democrats should pursue an “all of the above” approach, not merely to regain but to expand diverse voters’ participation and power.
Though the tools to sustain multi-racial democracy may be different from those employed in the 1960s, Madeleine Greenberg of the Campaign Legal Center reminded us: “Every generation has faced attempts to restrict access to the ballot box, and every generation has pushed back.” If Democrats win elections decisively and fully exercise the power they obtain, they can fix what MAGA white supremacists have broken. Only then can we fulfill the promise of pluralistic democracy.
The midterm elections of 2026 are approaching. Start working now to reclaim our democracy! Our time is now.

The real question is whether a disaffected American electorate will go to the polls. In Tennessee, 2.9 million people voted in the last presidential election. 2.3 million did not vote. These were registered voters. Who knows how many unregistered voters were out there?
Also, who knows how they would have voted? It is easy for us to look at the demographics of race and see that black Tennesseans are unimpressed with voting. Their turnout is extremely low, and a black minister in Memphis called on the population to organize and turn out big to protect Memphis against white supremacy. But black citizens are not the majority of non-voting populations. There are many more people across the political spectrum that see no point in voting.
The political leaders who get these people off the sidelines will start a new political movement, perhaps even a new party or a re-alignment of power within the old parties.
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Great point, Roy.
The U.S. in general has a relatively low voter turnout compared to peer nations.
I don’t know why people register to vote and then don’t bother to show up on Election Day.
Maybe they think their vote doesn’t matter.
That’s empirically not true.
Trump won several states by small
Margins.
Trump is now doing his best to intimidate voters, including the threat of military at the polls.
That won’t stop me.
It shouldn’t stop anyone.
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Maybe because “I’m going to keep committing genocide and sending your money to Israel and Ukraine, you’re not going to get healthcare, minimum wage increase, union protections, environmental protections or anything else that will help you but, hey, at least I’m not Trump!” wasn’t an inspiring message?
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I have pointed this out to individuals who always respond that there is no difference between Trump and his opponent. You and I know how stupid that is, but many of the disengaged voters do not follow policy. Damn them all helps Trump.
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As that my long response to Roy just vaporized . They do not show up because the substantive changes they were expecting don’t happen. From Criminal justice reform to Political reforms like campaign finance ,voting rights … All of which require killing the filibusterer and reforming the Court. Five of six who were appointed when Republicans lost the popular vote. Several who came in through underhanded means. Stolen from Gore (an election) ,Obama and Biden
In spite of rhetoric the Democrats are not committed to making that happen. They are content to be a minority party taking table scraps from the donor class who donates 5 to 1 to Republicans. Some donating to both and sharing just enough with elected Democrats to keep them hooked .
Look no further than those Democrats refusing a billionaires tax .
Its almost invigorating seeing how fast Republicans gutted voting rights and redistricted . Compare Virginia to Ohio . The people voted for a non Partisan Redistricting Commission in Ohio . The legislature ignored the Ballot initiative and drew up a Partisan map stealing several seats in 2022. The State Supreme Court ruled against the Map . The Legislature said make my day what are you going to do ? Yet in Virginia they will refer the issue to the Taliban 6 in DC. knowing full well what the result will be.
Then there is NY where 5 seats could be gotten. The map might look like a Jason Pollock painting but who cares take a look at Red States Pollock would be jealous .
Well Hakeem Jeffries and Tom Suozzi care . By diluting Jeffries 28 point lean Democrat District to say a 14 point lead , merging with say the East end and moving Suozzi’s district farther West . Both might face Primary Challenges. Suozzi from the Left . And Jeffries possibly by a White DSA style Candidate . Jeffries likes the safe districts he and several other Black members occupy more than Democrats taking the Majority and doing something for his Black Constituents . Suozzi we already know what he did the last time . He was a big reason the Biden agenda ended in 2022. As he ran for Governor instead of Congress when the redistricting was proposed. High lighting the Republican talking points on a non existent crime problem, he helped elect 4 Republicans . In the NYC Suburbs .
If that was not the case the NYS legislature would have cancelled the June primaries and would be already drawing a new map to save the country .
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Grounded optimism by J Rubin. Gives us humans a modicum of hope.
Trump is not smart but he is shrewd and pathologically narcissistic. From gerrymandering to selecing anti democratic supreme justices, his path is lined
with his gold in mind. Perhaps people will come out of from their comas as this economy tanks.
I am a retired NYC educator and am in touch with those still at schools. Teachers are the canary in the mines. I hear of stories from the classrooms
that reflect our country’s chaos and cruelty. We are in a tragedy.
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I have some optimism, too, tho it it’s from a different angle.
I love that Trump himself—amplified by the media—is pitching the midterms as desperately as tho he himself were listed on every ballot. He even managed to start a redistricting war that he is not winning, further serving to highlight the importance of the midterms. There is heated and loud talk about these elections in daily articles and among the commentariat, with a campaign windup that looks similar to that of a presidential election. This bodes well for a far larger voter turnout than normal for midterms. And, as we know, midterm elections tend to run against the incumbent party.
I love that Trump is unable to stuff the genie back into the bottle he uncorked with his unforced-error war on Iran. And only partly because he promised no new wars [even his base has problems with this betrayal.] Iran’s stranglehold on the Strait of Hormuz is unlikely to be unwound in time for prices at the pump to begin looking reasonable before November. That will get plenty of angry voters to the midterm polls.
I love that Democrats (so far) are managing to stick with the “affordability” platform. This is Trump’s Achilles’ heel, and (so far) his attempts to address it are nibbling around the edges, weak, and unlikely to make a dent in COL for the average American [by November? Hahaha]. We know from pre-&post 2024 election polls that the huge majority of voters chose based on kitchen-table issues ahead of any other (which is typical when times are tougher for JQPublic’s wallet). Many crossed their fingers & picked Trump, hoping he’d bring relief sooner than another Dem prez. He promised to do so– then actually made things worse, between extreme tariffs & Iran war.
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Except that the Median wage exceeded inflation in bottom four quin-tiles of earners. It is a bit more complicated in that it still means a lot of people are falling behind . But the only thing we can go by is the economic statistics. Inflation no inflation or in the best economy ever; there are always people left behind.
As you say the party in power tends to lose votes in the mid-terms . What does that say about the expectations of the American People . What does that say of their knowledge of Government or Politics or who they hold responsible and why. Do many even know who controls what branches of Government and what the powers of each branch are. How many cant name their Representative no less tell you how he votes or what policies his party votes for.
It would seem when confronted with a declining standard of living ; far too many are willing to blame a scapegoat rather than the politicians and Oligarchs / Plutocrats that control the economy . 79 trillion in wealth was transferred from the bottom 90% to the top 1% since 1975. Tat was not an act of God or something that just happened that was policy.
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