Virginia Democrats weigh plan to force out entire state Supreme Court after redistricting loss
One day after the Virginia Supreme Court struck down a Democratic redistricting referendum, party lawmakers jumped on a call to discuss a breathtaking countermove: lowering the mandatory retirement age for justices from 75 to 54, a change that would force every sitting member off the bench and let Democrats fill the vacancies with hand-picked replacements.
The idea was floated during a Saturday call that included House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and other Democratic lawmakers, the New York Times reported Sunday. The goal, according to the Times' account, is to seat new justices who could rehear the redistricting case and rule in Democrats' favor, reversing a 4-3 decision handed down just the day before.
Put plainly: Democrats lost a court fight on Friday, and by Saturday they were discussing how to replace the court itself.
The ruling that set it off
The Virginia Supreme Court ruled Friday that a Democratic-led redistricting initiative violated the state constitution. The court found the amendment had been placed on the ballot after early voting had already begun, a procedural defect that four justices said could not stand.
The proposed map was expected to give Democrats a chance to pick up as many as four new seats. Gov. Abigail Spanberger had campaigned for the redrawn districts before the court intervened. The 4-3 split was narrow, but the constitutional reasoning was straightforward: you cannot change the rules of an election while voters are already casting ballots.
That reasoning did not sit well with at least one Virginia Democrat in Congress. Rep. Suhas Subramanyam told the New York Times that the party needed to act aggressively.
"Everyone has got to have a strong stomach right now; this is a complete disaster waiting to happen if people are timid."
Subramanyam reportedly supported doing whatever was necessary to preserve the map voters approved, including replacing the justices who struck it down. He framed the maneuver as a response to what he described as Republican behavior in other states.
"We have Republican states ignoring their constitutions and interrupting early voting and ignoring their Supreme Courts all together. We know based on that, Republicans would explore every single option possible to move this forward."
The argument amounts to: the other side would do it, so we should too. That is not a legal argument. It is a political justification dressed in grievance.
How the scheme would work
Democrats control both chambers of the Virginia state Legislature in Richmond. Under the reported plan, those chambers would pass legislation slashing the mandatory retirement age for Supreme Court justices from 75 to 54. Because every current justice is apparently older than 54, the change would create seven simultaneous vacancies.
Democrats would then fill those seats with justices presumably willing to rehear the redistricting case, and rule the other way. The Virginia Supreme Court's Friday decision would effectively be erased, not by legal appeal, but by replacing the judges who issued it.
Any such legislation would require the signature of Gov. Spanberger. The Daily Caller News Foundation requested comment from both Subramanyam's office and Spanberger's office. Neither responded.
Spanberger's silence is notable. She is the one person who could stop the plan with a veto, or greenlight it with a signature. Her refusal to comment leaves open the question of whether she views the proposal as a serious legislative option or a trial balloon she would rather not be seen inflating.
A pattern, not an anomaly
This is not the first time Democrats have responded to an unfavorable court ruling by floating structural changes to the judiciary. At the federal level, progressive lawmakers have pushed to expand the U.S. Supreme Court after decisions on abortion, affirmative action, and administrative power went against them. The logic is always the same: if the court won't give us the outcome we want, we'll change the court until it does.
The Virginia version is arguably more brazen. Expanding a court adds seats. This plan would remove every sitting justice, including the three who dissented in Democrats' favor, and rebuild the bench from scratch. It treats the judiciary not as an independent branch but as a staffing problem to be solved with a personnel swap.
Recent federal redistricting battles have followed a similar pattern of escalation. The U.S. Supreme Court's rejection of race-based redistricting in Louisiana drew sharp Democratic criticism and calls for legislative workarounds. When courts enforce constitutional limits on map-drawing, the party that loses the map increasingly reaches for the nearest institutional lever.
Jen Kiggans, posting on X on May 11, called the effort what it looks like from the outside:
"The Democrats' gerrymandering scheme in Virginia was defeated by the Virginia Supreme Court last week yet they continue pushing their blatant power grab. Democrat politicians want to fire our Virginia Supreme Court justices and replace them with their 'yes' men. Pay attention..."
The constitutional stakes
Virginia's Supreme Court found that the redistricting amendment was added to the ballot after early voting had begun, violating the state constitution. The linked court opinion lays out the reasoning in a 4-3 decision. Whatever one thinks of the policy merits of the new maps, the procedural defect was real: voters were already casting ballots when the rules changed.
Democrats have framed the maps as the will of the people. But a court's job is to ensure that the will of the people is expressed through lawful process. Striking down a measure on procedural grounds is not judicial activism. It is the opposite, enforcing the rules that make elections legitimate in the first place.
The proposed retirement-age maneuver would undermine exactly the principle Democrats claim to be defending. If the goal is to honor what voters want, gutting the state's highest court to reverse a ruling is a strange way to show it. Voters also expect that judges will not be fired for reaching the wrong conclusion.
The broader implications of such a move extend well beyond Virginia. As we have covered, recent Supreme Court voting rights rulings have already reshaped the partisan landscape in several states. If one party can simply replace an entire state judiciary after a single unfavorable decision, the precedent would hollow out judicial independence everywhere.
What comes next
The proposal remains, for now, a reported discussion, not a filed bill. No legislation has been publicly introduced. Spanberger has not spoken. Subramanyam's office has not responded to requests for comment beyond what he told the New York Times.
But the fact that the idea was discussed on a call that included the House Minority Leader suggests it is not a fringe notion bubbling up from a backbencher. Jeffries' presence gives the conversation weight. And the mechanics are straightforward: Democrats have the votes in both chambers. They need only the governor's pen.
The broader Democratic redistricting strategy in Virginia has been aggressive from the start. The referendum itself was designed to lock in favorable maps. When the court blocked that effort on constitutional grounds, the immediate pivot to restructuring the court revealed how much was riding on those maps, and how little regard some lawmakers have for the institution that stood in their way.
Several open questions remain. Which other lawmakers joined the Saturday call? Has any bill text been drafted? Will Spanberger publicly distance herself from the proposal, or will she let it develop quietly? And if the plan advances, will any Virginia Democrats break ranks to defend judicial independence?
When a party's first instinct after losing in court is to replace the judges, the problem is not the court. It is the party.






