Here’s the thing most people don’t understand about power in Washington: it doesn’t disappear when you lose the majority. But you have to know how to wield it. We’ve been conditioned to think in binaries. Majority equals power. Minority equals irrelevance. You either have the gavel, or you don’t. You either control the floor, or you’re watching from the sidelines. That narrative is clean and simple, but it shouldn’t surprise you that the real story is much more complicated. You just have to pay close attention to what the House Democrats and Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries are doing right now. Instead of building a symbolic resistance and biding their time, they are governing. Not at scale. Not on everything. But in ways that actually matter. And they’re doing it without the one thing everyone assumes you need: control. The Old PlaybookThere’s a pattern we’ve come to expect from Congress. The minority party votes no, issues statements, and waits its turn. Members might even hold press conferences that disappear from memory the next day. We don’t expect the minority party to move legislation or force votes. And we definitely don’t expect it to make the majority party do anything it doesn’t want to do. That’s how the institution is supposed to work. I’ve seen it up close for years. Republicans have been effective in the minority, but they played a different game. They mastered obstruction. They unified fast, drove a simple message, and used the minority to weaken the majority and build momentum for the next election. It was disciplined, and it was certainly effective. But it never challenged the core premise of the institution. The minority could disrupt, delay, and define. But it didn’t govern. So I took notice of what Democrats have been doing under Leader Jeffries. Instead of treating the minority as a dead zone, Democrats are treating it as a proving ground. They’re using every available tool to create movement—forcing votes, shaping outcomes, and putting pressure on the majority where it hurts. Governing Without the GavelCongress runs on rules. Most members operate within them, but very few use them. What Leader Jeffries has done—and what doesn’t get nearly enough attention—is figure out how to use the rules of the institution instead of being boxed in by them. The discharge petition is a perfect example. It’s a procedural tool that is almost never used because it’s incredibly hard to execute. It allows the minority to force a vote if it can gather enough support. To succeed, you need unity within your caucus and defection from the other side. Both are rare. Together, they’re almost unheard of. And yet, Democrats have used it to deliver on health care, worker protections, and dislodging the Epstein files from the Trump Administration. That success takes discipline and coordination, and it definitely doesn’t happen if your caucus is fractured. But the real impact is leverage. Forcing a vote means forcing accountability and putting members of the majority party on record about issues they would rather avoid. It means turning what is usually a closed process into a public test of priorities. That changes behavior. Members start calculating political risk differently. Leadership loses some control over what reaches the floor. Issues that would have died quietly now demand a decision. This is what governing from the minority looks like in real terms: identifying pressure points, using the rules to exploit them, and creating moments where the majority no longer gets to operate on its own terms. Unity Is Not UnanimityAll of this happens because of internal cohesion, which historically has been a problem on the left. The Democratic caucus is not designed for easy agreement. You have ideological diversity and generational differences. Racial, geographic, economic perspectives don’t always align. We are the definition of a coalition party. When he joined me for this week’s episode of At Our Table, Leader Jeffries said, “We’re not striving for unanimity. That’s cult-like behavior. What we’re striving for is unity.” That’s a direct response to one of the biggest misconceptions about Democrats—that disagreement equals dysfunction. It doesn’t. In fact, in a coalition party, disagreement is the point. The challenge is channeling it. Leader Jeffries’ model is simple, but not easy: let people argue. Let them push. Let them bring their full perspective to the table. And then—at the end of it—find the highest common denominator you can move forward with. That’s how you build something durable. That’s also how you create the kind of unity required to govern without control. The Quiet Power of Forcing VotesHere’s where this becomes political. Once you force a vote, you’re reshaping incentives. Members of the majority party are making public choices with political consequences. That’s where leverage turns into pressure. And when you pick the right issues—health care subsidies, worker protections, releasing the Epstein files—you raise the cost of staying in line. Now a “no” vote has to be explained back home, and voters won’t accept party loyalty as an answer. That’s why you’re seeing Republicans break ranks in targeted ways. Not en masse. Not dramatically. But enough to pass something, create momentum, and show that control isn’t absolute. Why This Matters for 2026As the midterms come into sharper focus, what’s happening right now is going to shape the outcome. Democrats are showing instead of telling us what they will do when they have the majority. Every forced vote, every narrow win, every moment where they compel action from the majority becomes proof that they can deliver results even when the system isn’t set up for them to succeed. They are building credibility with voters who care about outcomes instead of procedural excuses. And they are testing the discipline they’ll need when they get the gavel back. This approach also sharpens the contrast. Republicans are in control, but they’re being forced into defensive positions. They’re explaining votes they didn’t want to take. They’re breaking ranks in ways that expose internal divisions. At the same time, Democrats are stress-testing their own coalition. They’re learning what holds, where the pressure points are, and how to move together when it counts. That’s the work that determines whether a majority can function once it’s won. Because if you can’t hold a coalition together in the minority, you won’t hold it together in the majority. The Message Problem Still LingersNow, none of this solves the Democrats’ biggest problem. They’re doing the work. They’re winning some of these fights. They’re showing a level of tactical sophistication that deserves more attention. But the connection to the public? Still inconsistent. And in politics, inconsistency gets punished. Leader Jeffries even acknowledges it. The intent is to “make life better for the American people,” but intent doesn’t always translate into clarity. You can be right on policy and still lose the narrative. You can deliver results and still not get credit for them. We’ve seen that many times before. Hell, that’s why we’re stuck with Trump 2.0. So the question goes back to whether Democrats can tell that story in a way that actually lands. What Leadership Looks Like Right NowWhat’s happening in the House right now should reset how people think about power. One of the most frustrating positions in American politics is being in the minority party in the House of Representatives. Democrats don’t have the majority, but they’re still forcing outcomes and creating pressure the majority can’t fully ignore. That’s not how the institution is supposed to work, but it’s what we get when a caucus is aligned, leadership is disciplined, and the strategy is clear. Most people are still waiting for the majority to decide what happens next. That’s the old model. We’re seeing a party that understands it still has agency and is choosing to use it. And when the Democrats take back the House, we’ll know the work of being the majority party started long before Election Day and we should give Leader Jeffries and his team credit for the work they have put in to make it happen. You’re currently a free subscriber to Jaime’s Table. For the full experience, upgrade your subscription. |

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