This is why, next time we get power, we cannot squander the opportunity. That's what I've been saying and will continue to say. We will have a short window to fix everything.
1. First step: neuter the Supreme Court and replace it with a new appellate court. Perfectly constitutional under Article III. Requires nothing more than a statute.
2: Hold a constitutional convention. Tell certain Southern states that they can participate in negotiating it and hopefully we can come to an agreement that all can live with, but if they don't agree, the president will use his unitary executive power to deregister some states so that the we can get 2/3 and 3/4. In the alternative, we can create 50 new states and use them to write the new constitution.
The new amended constitution must address issues like: executive authority (none of this idiotic unitary executive), the judiciary (no life tenure), gun rights (sorry, gun owners), and so on. It doesn't have to be a so-called liberal Christmas tree. It just have to have the provisions necessary for ordered liberty, which was the goal the first time around but that was a very, very long time ago.
3. If we cannot do that, then all will be lost. Is that a Chuck Schumer thing to do? It is not. But we would need the president and hopefully the president will learn how to keep Congress in check long enough to create the conditions for Congress to flourish.
4. As for Janet Mills, I don't really care. We need to run the candidate with the highest chance of winning. That's all that matters -- we need a (D) in that seat. Mills is apparently very popular in Maine. Yes, she's too old, but again -- we need to win and that's all that matters. Same in NC, which is why Roy Cooper is in the race.
Gutting the voting rights act is not necessarily a death knell. Especially if it happens in June, there won't be enough time to redraw districts. So we can take the house in 26. 28 would not be great, but who knows -- the future is hard to predict.
5. The House and the Senate were ready to pass the John Lewis voting rights act, which as I understood it, included provisions to combat gerrymandering. And then Sinema. I wouldn't say that she alone bears responsibility, of course, but she was presented the opportunity to cast a vote for justice and instead she cast a vote for her own relevance. And then she pissed everyone off anyway and so became unelectable. She was like a suicide bomber.