Chuck Schumer Admits He'd 'Love' To Add DC and Puerto Rico as States To Boost Dems in Senate
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer indicated Wednesday on MSNBC that Democrats would be inclined to forever alter the American political landscape after November, should they take power.
In recent months, liberals have hinted at making Puerto Rico and Washington, D.C, states, as well ending the Senate filibuster so that legislation only needs a simple majority to move forward.
Adding two new states to the union would almost certainly add four new Democratic senators to the upper chamber.
Meanwhile, if Senate Democrats maintain control of the House, win the Senate and the presidency, and end the filibuster, it would be far easier for liberal policy proposals to become law.
According to Schumer, these ideas and more are being considered.
During an interview Wednesday with MNSBC’s Joy Reid, the New York Democrat reminded voters that nothing is off the table.
Schumer told Reid that Republicans have “ruined the Senate” and that Democrats are using all possible tactics to obstruct them.
“Would that include adding — if the Senate becomes a Democratic majority — adding D.C. and Puerto Rico as states and ending the filibuster?” Reid asked the senator.
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Schumer responded, “I would — believe me, on D.C. and Puerto Rico, particularly if Puerto Rico votes for it, D.C. already has voted for it and wants it — I’d love to make them states.
“And as for the filibuster, I’m not busting my chops to become majority leader to do very little or nothing,” he said. “We are going to get a whole lot done, and as I’ve said: Everything, everything is on the table.”
The comments to MSNBC from Schumer came the week after he joined democratic socialist New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez at an event to lay out how Democrats intend to enact revenge, should Republicans confirm Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett.
“Once we win the majority, God willing, everything is on the table,” Schumer told an audience in New York on Sept. 20, according to Bloomberg. “If we don’t win the majority, these questions are all moot.”
If Democrats win a Senate majority in November, they don’t appear to have ruled out permanently altering the political landscape regardless of whether Barrett is confirmed.
Former President Barack Obama, for instance, used the funeral of the late Rep. John Lewis in July to attack the Senate filibuster.
Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden, meanwhile, has now refused multiple times to affirm to deny if he supports packing the Supreme Court with liberal justices so as to dilute the impact of conservative justices.
His running mate, Sen. Kamala Harris of California, has also refused to address the issue more than once.
This article appeared originally on The Western Journal.