ONLY WE ARE COMING TO SAVE US
You don’t need to be reminded, but the Supreme Court gutted what remained of the Voting Rights Act. Then, Virginia’s Supreme Court overruled its own voters on redistricting by one vote. Two decisions with the same goal. America’s right wing is trying to choke out democracy to achieve the two things the GOP cares about most: entrenching its power beyond the reach of voters, and saving Trump’s sorry ass.
You’ve heard it before. No one is coming to save us. No court. No billionaire. No venerable institution is about to rumble awake like Godzilla after a good nap.
The V-Dem Democracy Report 2026 measured the speed of the U.S. decline as unprecedented in American history, the fourth-largest single-year drop in the world, behind Hungary, Serbia, and India. These countries took nearly two decades to reach that level. The United States did it in one year.
Every week that passes without electoral accountability makes competitive authoritarianism—for the rest of our lives, at least, or at best—more likely.
Orbán rigged Hungary for 15 years. He still lost.
Viktor Orbán consolidated 80 percent of Hungarian media into a single pro-government borg. He retired 274 judges in his first year. He redrew electoral maps so that 45 percent of the popular vote became 91 percent of parliamentary seats, the same playbook Trump has carbon copied, imported wholesale. Orbán ran it for fifteen years, seven years before TikTok went global.
In April 2026, the opposition won 53 percent of the vote and a supermajority in parliament. Orbán conceded before the votes were fully counted. Today, Péter Magyar is the Prime Minister of Hungary.
Ode to Joy, the EU’s Anthem, plays in the Hungarian Parliament after Péter Magyar is sworn in.
Steve Levitsky, who has spent forty years watching democracies die, said it plainly on the April 30 episode of The Breakdown:
Oppositions can win unfair elections. Even when incumbents abuse power, even when they stack the deck, even when they cheat, they still sometimes lose.— Steve Levitsky, The Breakdown, Session 6, April 30, 2026
He was not telling us to trust the process. Or cross our fingers. Trump has shown a willingness to break the law and embrace violence that Orbán never did. But forty years of comparative research keep landing on the same finding: movements that fight at every level—especially at the state and local levels—can reverse backsliding.
Magyar didn’t beat Orbán by winning a news cycle. He built 208 local chapters, trained 50,000 poll watchers, and ran a volunteer-delivered newspaper called Tiszta Hang—Clear Voice—into every village Orbán’s media monopoly had blanketed.
He did the unimaginable, which is our only option.
One week. Two rulings. A generation of consequences.
The Callais decision is a green light to revert to Jim Crow-era congressional maps. Fair Fight Action projects Republicans could eliminate up to 19 Democratic House seats before 2028, enough for a near-permanent majority regardless of what voters actually want.
Then came Virginia. The state Supreme Court threw out a voter-approved redistricting plan—overruling people who went to the polls specifically to stop partisan gerrymanders—on procedural BS. Republicans in five other states were simultaneously redrawing maps through backroom deals with zero voter input.
There are few, if any, democracies in the world that allow gerrymandering. It existed in Hungary. Hungary was not a democratic regime. It is an extraordinarily undemocratic process, and the Supreme Court has just allowed it to accelerate.
— Steve Levitsky
Greg Sargent reports that the same analysis that shows Republicans eliminating 19 seats shows Democrats redrawing up to 22 additional congressional districts before 2028 — if they control the right statehouses. Wisconsin: three seats. Minnesota: three. Pennsylvania: up to six. The math is there. It requires downballot wins in chambers where small-dollar donations actually tip outcomes.
The first election after is the one that decides everything
Research on democratic backsliding suggests that the first competitive election after an episode of autocratization is usually the most consequential. The United States has already beaten those odds twice — in 2018 and 2020 — and the courts kept moving, the maps kept shifting, and the consolidation continued through both. What makes 2026 different is Callais. Lose the wrong statehouses this November, and the structural path to a reversal election in 2028 closes before it opens.
Orbán lost a fair election in 2002, spent eight years in opposition, came back in 2010, and then used his supermajority to make losing structurally impossible — consolidating media, retiring judges, and redrawing maps so that 45 percent of the vote became 91 percent of the seats. Magyar didn’t beat a weakened version of that machine. He beat the completed one, at full strength, and he still needed four years of infrastructure, 208 local chapters, 50,000 trained poll watchers, and a 57-percent inflation rate to do it.
2026 is a midterm. Lower turnout, less money, less attention, maps already drawn to disadvantage Democrats in most of the chambers that matter. The regime’s strategy is to use this cycle to lock in the map before 2028, so that 2028 cannot be the reversal election, no matter what voters actually want.
The machine Magyar beat was fifteen years in the making. Ours is fifteen months old. Or it's been building since John Roberts was a Reagan DOJ lawyer writing memos against the Voting Rights Act in 1982.
Voters don’t leave authoritarian movements through civics lessons
The most clarifying thing Levitsky said on this episode of The Breakdown was about defection — how people who backed the illiberal actually peel away. It’s not because they got a better high school civics class, though that would be nice.
People vote for the illiberal because of the price of eggs, and they vote against the illiberal because of the price of eggs, or because of corruption or other failures in power. The best way to peel voters away is through performance — demonstrating that they have not acted in our interests, that they’ve been corrupt, that they’ve abused power.
— Steve Levitsky
The tariff chaos is real and landing. Approval numbers are dropping. The corruption happens on camera, daily. Even if the Iran War ends this month (impossible), we’ll be feeling the consequences of Trump’s sadistic folly in November and beyond.
G. Elliott Morris’s May 2026 polling analysis finds that the voters Democrats can most plausibly reach—working-class, multiracial, heavily independent—already cite prices and the economy at a rate twelve times higher than crime, the issue, along with immigration, that has been the most common gateway drug to fascism.
We can win them. The problem is getting them to care enough to get to the polls.
How we can actually move the maps
If you have time, Rogan’s List surfaces the best volunteer opportunities every day. And I love the idea of contacting the campaign managers of local races to offer your skills.
If you have money, aim downballot. In federal races, small-dollar donations are a rounding error. In state legislative races—the races that determine who draws the lines before 2028—they can tip chambers.
- THE BEST WAY TO MULTIPLY YOUR MONEY: Start or join a giving circle through the States Project. TSP is a machine that charts with surgical precision to the exact seats that can flip chambers. A giving circle pools your network and multiplies impact. This is the highest-impact electoral action most of us can take right now.
- BUILD THE MOVEMENT: Support key infrastructure. Movement Voting Project builds grassroots capacity in key states. Run for Something recruits and supports young progressive downballot candidates, like a young state assemblymember with a funny name who just became New York City’s mayor, to run everywhere.
- DO YOUR RESEARCH: Give directly to the candidates. blue26.org curates the contests that matter most in Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Minnesota, and Georgia, and everywhere else. Research a race, find a campaign you believe in, seed a candidate you think has a long future.
- REACH GOAL: Expand the map. Every State Blue is working to make sure every race in the country is contested and eventually won. In Ohio, where the great Sherrod Brown is back on the ballot, and Republicans are running a literal clown that even MAGA can’t stand, Vivek Ramaswamy, for governor, presents a wild opportunity. Who knows what can happen?
Hungary did the unimaginable, which is our only option.
Here’s mine: stopthetrillionaires.com. More on that soon.
What’s yours?
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