For people asking why Dems are so gloomy, here's the baseline scenario for the next eight years of American government. It's a nightmare:
2021:
-Recession
-COVID
-Gridlock in Congress
-GOP-run statehouses gerrymanders new congressional districts with Trump's disrupted Census
-SCOTUS strikes down Biden executive orders, begins rolling back reproductive rights, civil rights, etc.
2022:
-Dems lose House in midterms, assisted by gerrymandering
-GOP holds Senate in midterms
-GOP state control increases as gerrymandering is intensified nationwide
2023:
-Debt ceiling showdowns
-Government shutdowns
-SCOTUS now emboldened to strike down almost all executive branch regulation through nondelegation changes
-Any Supreme Court or lower court vacancies from previous four years held open by GOP, no seats filled from here on out
2024:
-Presidential election, likely Dem win in popular vote, likely GOP win in electoral college
-Terrible Dem Senate map, additional seats lost
-GOP holds House
-Many, many GOP state trifectas
-Veto-proof state GOP majorities built on popular vote minorities
2025:
-McConnell or successor fills SCOTUS vacancies, 7-2 court plausible
-McConnell or successor ends legislative filibuster
-New GOP president (Trump again? Carlson?) safely ignores federal law for appointments, emoluments, etc.
-Integrity of elections seriously threatened
2026:
-First chance for Dems to retake House, but outcome uncertain because the party faces restricted elections and extreme gerrymandering
-Mediocre Senate map leaves Senate out of reach
2027:
-Potential conflict between Dem House and GOP administration, but most oversight tools have been eliminated in the Trump administration
-More judges confirmed, judiciary 80%+ GOP
2028:
-First chance for Dem trifecta
-Must win gerrymandered House
-Must win unrepresentative Senate
-Must win skewed electoral college
-Must overcome likely 7-2 SCOTUS
-Must overcome massively gerrymandered state legislatures
-Any narrow win likely contested using 2020 precedent
At this point:
-Total GOP control of judiciary
-Civil rights law gone
-EPA gone
-Most regulation gone
-Voting Rights Act gone
-Abortion largely illegal
-Financial reg gone
-Health care expansion impossible
-Inequality up
-Tax code massively favors wealthy
After 2028, who knows? It's hard to guess at that point. But even if Dems get a chance to govern again this decade - and they might well not, this cycle could repeat another decade - they'll likely be presiding over a broken country, with corruption rampant and democracy stifled.
And please note: this scenario is robust to Dems having huge popular majorities.

It's perfectly plausible that, in 2028, Dems will have won virtually every popular vote for the past 30 years, but have controlled the government for just one brief 2-year stretch: 2008-2010.
This is not inevitable. History is chaotic, unpredictable. Bold Dem leaders could defy anti-democratic mechanisms, wrench us off this course. Catastrophe could strike somehow. Fundamentals could change somehow. The future is impossible to see for certain.
But if the predictable, long-running patterns of US politics continue, this is where we end up. There is no magical cosmic force that will come down and prevent us from going off this cliff. Other places have gone off cliffs of their own, many times before. We're not special.
UPDATE: I am really sorry for bumming everyone out. Don't be bummed out! Be mad! You don't have to accept minority rule. There are tools to avoid this catastrophe. Dems just cannot assume the problem will solve itself, or focus on the small stuff while drifting towards the brink.
Dems need leadership that is cognizant of these compounding structural threats, and is determined to fight them and reverse them PROACTIVELY AND AT EVERY TURN. The structural vise we're in can't be left untouched, to tighten in the background with each successive electoral cycle.

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More from @whstancil

12 Nov
This is the part of the Trump narrative that liberals are most blind to. Dem leadership, especially in the House, has been a catastrophe. Petty, parochial, short-sighted, inert, unable to rise to any challenge, and obsessed with maintaining its own power.
Even now, with zero accomplishments to their name, Trump unchecked at any point except (perhaps) by the election result, all previous promises of oversight expired with the clock run out, and an electoral flop, many liberals think they’re watching genius in action.
All the literally hundreds of message bills Pelosi bragged about, what did they do? Absolutely nothing - none of them will ever become law.

All of the promises of “arrows in the quiver” - were any ever fired?

The assurances that “healthcare” would increase majorities? Imploded.
Read 4 tweets
12 Nov
Pelosi and Dem leaders spent several years defending the idea that the key to replicating 2018, and winning swing districts, was a laser focus on health care issues, and to avoid conflict with Trump.

And they won the argument! Their strategy was universally implemented.
Then, the 2020 downballot races were a disaster, and Dems leaders' role in deciding messaging strategy was instantly forgotten by almost everyone. To hear it today, Dems spent months talking about socialism and police abolition.
DC Dems are suffering a bizarre collective amnesia, seemingly unable to recognize that they got to run the exact race that leadership urged them to run... and it failed.
Read 5 tweets
11 Nov
"It couldn't possibly be our dismal leadership, our do-nothing House, or our uninspiring, one-note message. It was that some activists, in a totally different state, used a slogan in June, that we didn't embrace."
Still waiting for someone to explain to me why the polls IMPROVED after "defund the police" became a thing. Were the polls right before, but wrong after? Does that make any sense at all?
There was clearly some kind of structural error in the polling. But if that's the case, the Senate Dems were WEAKER THAN THEY LOOKED ALL ALONG. The whole "blame the left" thing presupposes they were winning in March and then secretly losing in July.
Read 4 tweets
10 Nov
Right now Republicans are going on TV every night and calling the election a fraud.

Meanwhile, the Democrat who just won by millions of votes, and his entire party, are still in their perpetual defensive huddle, afraid to use any tool of government to protect themselves.
I’m not “imagining” any tools. You can subpoena the GSA heads. You can subpoena the resigned DOJ attorney and other members of DOJ. You can impeach Barr. You do not have to simply sit and wait for all crises to resolve themselves.
Read 5 tweets
10 Nov
People are worried about coups, but the thing causing me real despair is the prospect of living for decades in an ever-tightening vice of right-wing gerrymandering and court packing, in which there is no election victory large enough to permit anyone left of center to govern
Self-styled moderates in the political class see this as salutary, because they think it forces compromise. But it doesn’t, even in the most optimistic rendering, because the right has no such limitation. The right can easily secure governing trifectas with a minority of the vote
The undemocratic structure of our government has created a one-way ratchet: Republicans win total control and further clamp down on civil society, then government becomes divided, creating an interregnum in which they block any swing in the other direction.
Read 8 tweets
9 Nov
It’s really striking how all the GOP ads imply Dem reps are crooked and the puppet of an unpopular party leader.

I wonder if Dems could have alleged something similar, but decided to talk about health care instead? Nah, probably not, that would be crazy.
Moderate Dems: “We all ran behind Biden! It’s AOC’s fault!”

Me: “Did you... did you try to tie your opponent to Donald Trump and yourself to Joe Biden?”

Moderate Dems: “No! We spent three years specifically avoiding it and begging Pelosi not to nationalize our races!”
In a little bit of historic irony, it was specifically Conor Lamb’s 2017 special election that convinced House Dems that the key to winning was to deemphasize Donald Trump. At the time, a few of us on here were very concerned over it, begged the party to rethink.
Read 4 tweets

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