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Blue State Dems Are Having an Overdue Reckoning With Their Own Power

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Blue State Dems Are Having an Overdue Reckoning With Their Own Power

This article is part of TPM Cafe, TPM’s home for opinion and news analysis. 

When Texas Republicans announced plans for a mid-decade gerrymander to net them at least five more U.S. House seats, it set off a chain reaction. Texas Democrats left the state to break quorum. Democratic governors began discussing countermeasures. And former Attorney General Eric Holder, chair of the National Democratic Redistricting Committee, reversed course after a decade of vocal opposition to partisan redistricting and called for Democrats to embrace gerrymandering in blue states, at least temporarily.

The immediate headline is about redistricting. But the more significant story is the growing willingness of blue states to use power more forcefully in an era of declining federal reliability and rising authoritarian threat. If gerrymandering is now back on the table, then the real opportunity lies in something broader: a more serious and strategic approach to wielding blue state power.

Gerrymandering is one tool — controversial, and of uncertain consequence — but it points to a larger truth: states are powerful. For decades, progressive politics has been ambivalent, even resistant, to using that power assertively. But if state leaders are finally ready to wield it, we need more than tactical redistricting. We need a deliberate and coordinated strategy to use state authority to defend democracy, shift national dynamics, serve communities, and re-engage the electorate.

In the aftermath of the 2024 election, a consistent theme that emerged was that too many voters on the left sat out. Fear and warnings weren’t enough. What’s needed now is a clear, values-driven demonstration of public interest governance — of leaders fighting visibly and unapologetically for us and for democracy. 

This is a break-the-glass moment. So let’s talk about all the glass available, not just congressional maps.

State governments possess an extraordinary range of tools that can be deployed in bold, coordinated ways. And power can be pooled across states for even greater impact. Conservatives are masterful at this. Just recently, 26 right-wing state financial officers signed a joint letter to BlackRock, urging the firm to abandon environmental, social, and governance (ESG) investing principles or risk losing state business. And following Trump’s Executive Order last week directing banking regulators to stop “debanking” conservative-led or aligned firms or industries like crypto, the same group issued coordinated support. Such coordinated actions are routine in the tightly-knit conservative governance ecosystem.

Progressive state leaders can also coordinate responses — not as retaliation, but as a legitimate exercise of public power in response to federal dysfunction. The purpose should not be to punish the people living in red states, but to protect democratic institutions, safeguard communities, and improve people’s lives. In the short term, states can do much to counter the unraveling of protective federal programs and unchecked federal overreach. Many of these tools are already in use, though rarely presented as part of a broader strategic vision.

For instance, states can enter into memoranda of understanding and interstate compacts to harmonize policy, share resources, and strengthen their collective power. Although interstate compacts may seem obscure, they’re commonplace: more than 250 exist today, and states participate in an average of 25 each. States can also use their collective purchasing power to influence corporate behavior and shift markets. And large states like California — the world’s fourth-largest economy — can enter international agreements on climate, trade, and human rights, forging alliances that bypass federal paralysis.

States can go further. Maryland and New York are proposing legislation to withhold federal taxes remittances from state employees while the federal government remains in arrears on pledged funding. New York legislators are considering revoking state tax credits for Avelo Airlines, which contracts with Immigration and Customs Enforcement for deportation flights — offering a model for leveraging state incentives to pressure federal contractors that defy public values. State attorneys general investigate extremist networks operating within their jurisdictions, and coordinate with counterparts in other states to scale those efforts. 

Legislatures also have powerful oversight functions that can surface abuses and create visibility. Even in red states, lawmakers can demand access to detention facilities and sue when denied, as Florida lawmakers did after Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administration blocked their oversight of Alligator Alcatraz. Legislators in multiple states could organize joint hearings to investigate federal overreach and misconduct, as well as right-wing influence operations. 

Some states are also refusing to cooperate with ICE, as Delaware did when it became the seventh state to pass legislation prohibiting local collaboration with federal immigration enforcement. Others, including California, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, New York, and Michigan, are advancing “No Secret Police” bills to unmask federal agents operating anonymously in communities. In Boston this week, more than 20 state legislators from across the country held a joint press conference to highlight these efforts. 

States can also limit military cooperation. Vermont’s Republican governor recently declined a federal request for National Guard deployment. Washington has barred out-of-state Guard units from entering without explicit permission. States can reject politically-motivated Justice Department requests for voter data and protect sensitive state-held records from federal misuse. Illinois is protecting autism-related health data, while New Mexico and Washington are refusing to share SNAP benefit records.

These actions are already underway, but often in isolation, with little coordination or public visibility. That’s a missed opportunity. These efforts rarely make national news or come together into a story the public can recognize: a story of state leaders using every tool at their disposal to protect rights, lives, and the future we all deserve.

Wielding state power in a sophisticated, multi-pronged response to federal disintegration and anti-democratic threat may not flip the House map before 2026. But it does something equally important — it creates a visible, coherent story of urgency and public leadership. It demonstrates capability, and a willingness to act. It helps rebuild trust and energy among voters who have grown disillusioned or disengaged. It builds capacity and strengthens the collective muscle of state-level governance. And it inspires civic engagement, from neighborhood organizing to voter turnout.

If we’re serious about confronting the threats facing American democracy, then it’s time to fully embrace blue state power. Not as a fallback, not to punish the people of red states, but as the confident exercise of power in the public interest — to make people’s lives better. Now is not the time to shy away from the power we have. Now is the time to wring it dry.

Gaby Goldstein is Founder + President of State Futures, which supports communities of practice for state policymakers. Through working groups, policy research, and strategic support, State Futures empowers state leaders to learn from each other, innovate together, and take coordinated action across states. 

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ScottInPDX
6 days ago
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I really hope we get a large, effective response to the fascist overreach, and this is a good roadmap for a sustainable improvement.
Portland, Oregon, USA, Earth

publicdomainreview: Some essential reading for...

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publicdomainreview:

Some essential reading for #InternationalCatDay" — the wonderfully illustrated Nine Lives of a Cat (1860) — https://publicdomainreview.org/collection/the-nine-lives-of-a-cat-1860

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ScottInPDX
10 days ago
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I have such a cat - she's a couple of steps in, but there are so many more to go.
Portland, Oregon, USA, Earth

Trump demands Kennedy Center Opera House be named after his current wife, or lose all federal funding

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See if you can guess what happened next!

Shot

Buried in amendments to the Interior Dept. Gov funding bill, is a stipulation that the Kennedy Center Opera House must be renamed the ‘First Lady Melania Trump Opera House’ in order to receive federal funds.

Chaser:

The House Appropriations Committee has voted to rename the Kennedy Center Opera House in Washington, D.C., after First Lady Melania Trump — a move tucked into a broader government funding bill aimed at avoiding a potential shutdown in late September.

While no Republicans voted against it, one Democrat, Rep. Marie Gluesenkamp Perez (D-WA), a moderate and co-chair of the Blue Dog Caucus, voted in favor of the amendment. The final vote was 33-25.

While I will defer to my more knowledgeable FPers from the lumberjack and Nike corner of the United States on this question, I somehow doubt that Rep. Perez will pull many votes from Washington state’s not at all crazy Republican voters as a result of this heartwarming bipartisan gesture.

Speaking of heartwarming bipartisanship, Barack Obama has responded to that whole “you committed treason by investigating Russia’s interference in the 2016 election, of which there was none, and by none we mean ‘a certain amount.'”

 “Out of respect for the office of the presidency, our office does not normally dignify the constant nonsense and misinformation flowing out of this White House with a response. But these claims are outrageous enough to merit one. These bizarre allegations are ridiculous and a weak attempt at distraction.

“Nothing in the document issued last week undercuts the widely accepted conclusion that Russia worked to influence the 2016 presidential election but did not successfully manipulate any votes. These findings were affirmed in a 2020 report by the bipartisan Senate Intelligence Committee, led by then-Chairman Marco Rubio.”

I’ll free ride on Karen’s expertise in regard to what totally not bought and paid for fascist mouthpiece Matt Taibbi has to say about this, as he’s been spending the last few weeks pumping this particular lie/hallucination.

The post Trump demands Kennedy Center Opera House be named after his current wife, or lose all federal funding appeared first on Lawyers, Guns & Money.

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freeAgent
26 days ago
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WTF? Melania Trump is not a fine arts performer, not a politician, and not notable for ANYTHING beyond having chosen to marry a rich buffoon.
Los Angeles, CA
ScottInPDX
26 days ago
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I have a representative who needs to be fired.
Portland, Oregon, USA, Earth

Being a Jew in America right now is so bizarre. The president’s right hand man endorses a far-right…

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thesnadger:

Being a Jew in America right now is so bizarre. The president’s right hand man endorses a far-right German party that wants to remove Holocaust memorials and ban the sale of kosher meat, members of the ruling party are doing nazi salutes at rallies, and standing members of congress openly repeat conspiracy theories about the Rothschilds and Jewish space lasers. Then you see a news article about antisemitism and it’s like “we need to do something about all these college students protesting mass killings.”

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ScottInPDX
27 days ago
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I'm not Jewish, but I can't say it looks any more fun to be a Jew in America.
Portland, Oregon, USA, Earth

Sen. Murkowski, feeling ‘cheated’ by Trump actions against wind and solar, says she’ll go to bat for Alaska projects - Anchorage Daily News

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ScottInPDX
28 days ago
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We'll see if she finally grows a spine. The past few years don't make me optimistic.
Portland, Oregon, USA, Earth

"Visit Dubai!"

jwz
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Caitlín Doherty:

I went to Dubai wrongheaded. I learnt nothing and left nauseated. I had thought it would be fun -- funny, even -- to experience the disorientation of standing at the pivot point between two world systems. Instead, it was merely disorientating -- sickeningly so. There are hells on earth and Dubai is one: an infernal creation born of the worst of human tendencies. Its hellishness cannot be laid solely at the feet of the oligarchs, whose wealth it attracts, nor the violent organised criminals who relocate there to avoid prosecution. It is hellish because, as the self-appointed showtown of free trade, it provides normal people with the chance to buy the purest form of the most heinous commodity: the exploitation of others. If you want to know how it feels to have slaves, in the modern world -- and not be blamed openly for this desire -- visit Dubai. But know that you will not be blameless for doing so. Every Instagram post, every TikTok video, every gloating WhatsApp message sent from its luxury is an abomination. A PR campaign run by those who have already bought the product, and now want only to show you that they can afford it. [...]

If you try to humanise the place you will lose your mind. If you ask yourself what the woman at the hair-braiding stand left behind to be here, and why, you will lose your mind. If you accept the kindness of the staff with whom you make a paltry effort to speak each morning as they clear your dirty breakfast plate, you will lose your mind, because your tip is the only kindness you can meaningfully offer in return. Trying to attend to your own towel by the pool might cause the man who stands for hours in the ferocious sun to do so for you to lose his job. Being served makes us cruel infants. It demeans us all.

Previously, previously, previously, previously, previously, previously, previously, previously.

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satadru
29 days ago
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New York, NY
freeAgent
28 days ago
There are normal people in Dubai. My sister-in-law was a flight attendant for Emirates for some time, and she was there by choice, had a normal job, and was well compensated. I take the overall point here, but I also think it's important to not paint with too broad a brush. There are normal people everywhere.
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ScottInPDX
28 days ago
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I haven't been to Dubai yet, but this is exactly why I'm not in a hurry to go. A lot of my feelings were based on these same ideas, and I would rather not pay to be complicit in this state of affairs.
Portland, Oregon, USA, Earth
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