Virginia Democrats are getting away with electoral highway robbery, and the Republican establishment's response has been as predictable as it is pathetic: file another lawsuit and hope for the best.
The courts have essentially green-lit the Democrats' gerrymandering gambit in the Old Dominion, refusing to halt what amounts to a systematic rigging of electoral maps to benefit the radical left. But here's the million-dollar question every patriot should be asking: Where the hell is the GOP's ground game?
While Democrats are busy redrawing districts to lock in their power for the next decade, Republicans are playing their favorite losing game - relying on lawyers instead of voters. It's the same tired playbook that has cost conservatives election after election across the country.
Lawsuits Don't Win Elections - Voters Do
The harsh reality is that Republicans cannot lawsuit their way out of this mess. Democrats understand something the GOP establishment refuses to acknowledge: elections are won by the party that shows up, knocks doors, and gets their people to the polls.
"Republicans need to be in campaign mode, knocking doors, and getting people to the polls if and when the election occurs," sources familiar with the situation tell conservative media. That's not just good advice - it's political survival.
President Trump didn't win his historic second term by filing lawsuits. He won by building the most powerful grassroots movement in American political history, mobilizing millions of forgotten Americans who had been ignored by the political class.
Time For Action, Not More Excuses
Virginia Republicans have a choice: they can continue playing defense with their army of consultants and lawyers, or they can take a page from Trump's playbook and build a ground operation that overwhelms whatever gerrymandered advantages Democrats think they've secured.
The Trump-Vance administration has shown what's possible when conservatives fight with the same intensity as their opponents. It's time for state and local Republican parties to follow that lead.
Because here's the bottom line, folks: gerrymandered districts don't vote - people do. And if Republicans can't figure out how to reach those people, no court ruling will save them from political irrelevance.
