I agreed that he was past his expiration as leader. I just don't see this as particularly consequential.
I find it impossible to believe that Schumer lets the tail wag the dog here. He imbues the Baileys with what he wants on policy. He doesn't let his creation backstory influence what policies he pursues. I mean, I guess I don't know that for sure, but Schumer is a smart guy. He's not going to be wacky kooky like that.
So we have a guy who got carried away with a fictitious creation. I'm guessing it was probably a matter of overcompensation. He probably felt uncomfortable with it at first, and he worried about the lack of believability, so he created the backstory. And then, it's like the ponzi scheme as I argued above: once you commit to that, you can't get yourself out. So he gets increasingly uncomfortable, and he rachets up the backstory in response and it becomes this sort of weird self-destructive doom loop. I just can't get too worked up over it.
Would this be enough, independently, to doom Schumer's leadership? I mean, sure. I don't know if I would vote against Schumer on this basis, but if you did I wouldn't fault you. And you could probably convince me that the optics were bad enough to make the change worthwhile. I don't know how much "leadership" actually matters in the Senate. Like, if Schumer was replaced by Durbin or Murray or Booker, would the Dems policies be much different? I doubt it, though concededly I don't actually know. And if not much rides on it, there's little cost to overreacting, if that's what it would be.