On the 250th anniversary of the nation's founding, top House Democrats announced exactly what they'll do if voters hand them power in 2026: pack the Supreme Court, impose term limits on justices, and nuke the Senate filibuster. If you had any doubt that the left's endgame is to rig the rules when it can't win the argument, they just handed you the blueprint.

This matters because the constitutional republic — the Founders' system of checks, balances, and supermajority requirements — is the only thing standing between ordinary Americans and raw majoritarian rule by an establishment that despises them. The filibuster forces consensus. Lifetime appointments insulate the Court from political pressure. Democrats now want to blow up both, and they're telling you to your face.

The Gateway Pundit reports that the resolution is led by Rep. Greg Casar of Texas, chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, along with Rep. Yvette Clarke of New York, who leads the Congressional Black Caucus, Rep. Grace Meng of New York, who leads the Congressional Asian Pacific American Caucus, Rep. Hank Johnson of Georgia, and Rep. Adriano Espaillat of New York, chair of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus. Their resolution was obtained by Politico.

The resolution declares: "The Court's far-right supermajority poses a serious threat to any future attempts by Congress to realize the promise of a multiracial democracy, rein in executive power, champion worker's rights, protect voting rights, and restore and strengthen the Federal protections against racial discrimination in the Voting Rights Act."

Read that language carefully. "Multiracial democracy" — a phrase that means whatever the left needs it to mean. "Worker's rights" — from the same party that shipped working-class jobs overseas for decades. The pretext is the Court's decision narrowing the 1965 Voting Rights Act. The goal is permanent structural advantage.

President Trump flagged the threat plainly: "The Dumocrats are openly stating that they plan to TERMINATE THE FILIBUSTER if they ever take power, and EXPAND THE SUPREME COURT." He warned that Republicans, including Senate Majority Leader John Thune, are asleep at the switch — noting Thune's refusal to pass voter ID despite what The Gateway Pundit reports as 80+ percent support from Americans across party lines.

Here's the pattern: when Democrats hold power, institutional norms are sacred. When they lose, every institution is illegitimate. The filibuster was a proud tradition when it served their purposes. The Court was beyond reproach when it manufactured constitutional rights from whole cloth. Now that the Court reads the law as written, it's a "far-right supermajority" that must be dismantled.

This is what a party does when it cannot persuade. It doesn't reconsider policy. It doesn't ask why working Americans rejected its agenda. It changes the rules, adds seats, and eliminates the guardrails that force compromise. The Founders built a system designed to be hard to change — on purpose. They'd lived under a crown that ruled by decree.

The question isn't whether Democrats will try this. They just told you they will. The question is whether enough Americans remember why those guardrails exist — and whether Republicans have the spine to defend them before the vote, not after.