When Political Chess Becomes Russian Roulet
Timing and leverage are crucial in American politics, and mistakes can have deadly consequences.
When California Governor Gavin Newsom’s daring power move against President Donald Trump backfired this week,
revealing weakness rather than strength and accelerating Republican momentum, he learned that lesson.
In order to demonstrate national leadership and discourage Texas Republicans from pursuing aggressive redistricting, Newsom gave Trump a 24-hour ultimatum.
He wrote that if Trump didn’t “stand down,” he would push for changes to the California map.
However, the ultimatum established an unachievable benchmark. Newsom was boxed in by the strict 24-hour deadline, which gave his opponents crucial time to plan counterattacks.
The action encouraged Texas Republicans to escalate rather than compel them to reach a compromise.
The structural reality was the deeper flaw. California uses an independent commission to redraw districts, in contrast to Texas, where Republicans can do so through legislation.
Opponents quickly emphasized that Newsom’s threat was slow, expensive, and uncertain because any change would need voter approval.
Republican leaders took advantage of the situation. The asymmetry was revealed when Texas Governor Greg Abbott retorted that his state could eliminate twice as many Democratic districts as California could Republican ones. This mathematical fact demonstrated how Republicans would probably win a redistricting battle.