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MineralMan

(150,858 posts)
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 09:36 AM 5 hrs ago

How Can Schumer and Jeffries Be Our Congressional Leaders?

I've seen several OPs here about how badly we need to replace those two men as our party's Congressional Leadership. That got me wondering how they got those positions at all, given their unpopularity with some Democrats.

Well, Chuck Schumer has been one of the Senators from New York since 1999, winning statewide elections there by up to a 70% majority. He is in his fifth 6-year senate term. Then, in 2017, he was elected as chair of the Senat Democratic Caucus. He has been the Senate Majority or Minority leader since 2017.

Hakeem Jeffries - He has been the NY 8th District Congressman since 2013. He was elected as the House Democratic Caucus Chair in 2019. He became the Democratic House Leader in 2022.

So, both of our Democratic congressional leaders represent the state of New York. They were elected to their offices by voters in that state. They seem popular in New York. I don't vote in New York, so I've never voted for them. Both were elected to their congressional leadership positions by other Democrats in their houses of Congress. I'm not a member of Congress, so I had no vote for those positions, either.

Some people have called out for their replacement in leadership. That would have to be done either by members of Congress voting them out of their positions. As far as I know, no members of Congress are members of DU. So, we don't get a say in that.

The other route to removing them from their leadership positions would be for them not to be elected to Congress at all. That would have to happen in elections in New York state. There's one for the House this November, so New York voters could remove him from office at that time. The trouble there is that Jeffries won in the last election with a 75% majority. Schumer won statewide with a 70% majority. So, that seems unlikely to happen, as well. As I said, I don't vote in New York. No doubt some DUers do, though. Maybe they could try, if that's their goal.

The bottom line here is that both men are popular with their constituencies and in their Democratic caucuses, in Congress. I don't get a vote on that, and neither does anyone else on DU.

So, we have the leadership we have. I may not agree 100% with everything those leaders do, but I support them in their leadership. I assume they know what they're doing better than I do, anyhow.

I don't see any change on the horizon, either. So, I'll continue to work in my own state to elect Democrats to Congress and to my state legislature. That seems to me to be my best opportunity to influence what happens next.

59 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
How Can Schumer and Jeffries Be Our Congressional Leaders? (Original Post) MineralMan 5 hrs ago OP
Nope Abstractartist 5 hrs ago #1
I kind of don't think that's going to happen. MineralMan 5 hrs ago #5
You answered your own questions, gab13by13 5 hrs ago #2
I don't follow NY politics, so I can't say. MineralMan 5 hrs ago #4
She beats him handily in polls. CivicGrief 2 min ago #59
Abolish ICE Prairie Gates 5 hrs ago #3
Crack that whip. We might not get a vote but we sure as fuck get to have an opinion. Autumn 4 hrs ago #6
Of course you can have an opinion. MineralMan 4 hrs ago #7
Oh of course. Autumn 4 hrs ago #8
Our time is finite and every minute you spend criticizing Democrats is a minute Republicans thank you for your service. W_HAMILTON 32 min ago #52
Lol! As I've said before, shit won't stir itself. Scrivener7 4 hrs ago #9
200 response clout is a rush, doncha know? Prairie Gates 4 hrs ago #17
It takes a big paddle to get it stirred. Autumn 4 hrs ago #19
Good question BeyondGeography 4 hrs ago #10
Republicans are laughing at Democrats' commitment to rules and decorum DSandra 4 hrs ago #15
We get it awesomerwb1 4 hrs ago #11
What I think is irrelevant. MineralMan 4 hrs ago #12
Indeed it is awesomerwb1 4 hrs ago #13
I doubt there will be such a thread. MineralMan 4 hrs ago #22
Has any democratic senator or representative SocialDemocrat61 4 hrs ago #14
I don't know the answer to that question. MineralMan 4 hrs ago #20
I don't know of any SocialDemocrat61 4 hrs ago #24
That's what I thought, too. MineralMan 4 hrs ago #26
Have they? SocialDemocrat61 4 hrs ago #29
Dem. Reps Ro Khanna and Seth Moulton have called for Schumer to relinquish his position. LudwigPastorius 26 min ago #55
Thanks SocialDemocrat61 13 min ago #58
Imagine if Britain kept Neville Chamberlain than replace him with Winston Churchill... DSandra 4 hrs ago #16
Which is why I support replacing SocialDemocrat61 4 hrs ago #25
I'm talking about Democratic Party leadership of course DSandra 3 hrs ago #39
But we don't have a parliamentary system SocialDemocrat61 3 hrs ago #42
Your just making excuses, like the OP DSandra 1 hr ago #49
No SocialDemocrat61 56 min ago #50
Trump's popular with MAGA Sympthsical 4 hrs ago #18
But we all do vote for President of the U.S. SocialDemocrat61 4 hrs ago #31
I live in California. Sympthsical 28 min ago #53
I live in New York SocialDemocrat61 15 min ago #57
This is DU. We are all Democrats here. MineralMan 3 hrs ago #36
You're promoting submissive voicelessness to power Sympthsical 27 min ago #54
Trump is also in office because people vote for him regardless of the criticism. W_HAMILTON 17 min ago #56
Two guys from Brooklyn, we do get to vote for the guys who vote for them as leaders. Walleye 4 hrs ago #21
That's exactly how it works. MineralMan 4 hrs ago #23
That is true and correct Walleye 4 hrs ago #27
Like you say, i will always believe the citizens in THEIR District bluestarone 4 hrs ago #28
Yes. That is the basis of our entire system of government. MineralMan 4 hrs ago #32
Yea, just saying division will kill us, that's what rethugs are hoping. bluestarone 3 hrs ago #37
But that's because of party leadership's failure to meet the moment, not miscellaneus squabbles DSandra 3 hrs ago #40
Ah, the daily gaslighting thread. Gore1FL 4 hrs ago #30
What was incorrect in my OP? MineralMan 3 hrs ago #33
AND sea lioning! Efficiency! Scrivener7 3 hrs ago #41
A factual explanation about Democratic leadership needs a trigger warning. betsuni 3 hrs ago #34
A tip of my hat to you. MineralMan 3 hrs ago #35
Two words: Wall Street DJ Synikus Makisimus 3 hrs ago #38
Here's where it falls apart Bobstandard 3 hrs ago #43
Absslutely This is exactly right. That long in office and making as much money as they make Autumn 2 hrs ago #48
There's a process to remove them as leaders without them losing their seats PJMcK 2 hrs ago #44
My grandfather use to say SocialDemocrat61 2 hrs ago #45
I appreciate your rational, factual posts. murielm99 2 hrs ago #46
Thank you. I try to do that. MineralMan 2 hrs ago #47
If you look at polls of "favorability" ratings,... LudwigPastorius 38 min ago #51

gab13by13

(31,620 posts)
2. You answered your own questions,
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 09:41 AM
5 hrs ago

Schumer and Jeffries keep winning because their constituents aren't going to vote for a Republican, and now someone from the Magat party, since Republicans have been expunged.

I have a question for you MM, would Chuck beat AOC in a primary? I live next door to New York, but my opinion is that she would smoke him.

CivicGrief

(254 posts)
59. She beats him handily in polls.
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 02:41 PM
2 min ago

Don’t fear progressives. They just might be what we need.

Autumn

(48,865 posts)
6. Crack that whip. We might not get a vote but we sure as fuck get to have an opinion.
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 09:48 AM
4 hrs ago
To quote an asshole. Or better yet, my favorite Governor

"Thank you for your attention to this matter."

W_HAMILTON

(10,236 posts)
52. Our time is finite and every minute you spend criticizing Democrats is a minute Republicans thank you for your service.
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 02:11 PM
32 min ago

And fact of the matter is every single Democrat in office right now could be replaced by a clone that agrees with you 100% of the time and it wouldn't change things one bit because we'd still be in the minority and Republicans would still be in complete control of the federal government.

BeyondGeography

(40,928 posts)
10. Good question
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 09:53 AM
4 hrs ago

If ever there was a man not meant for this moment, it is Chuck Schumer:


?s=20

But we have rules and a whole culture built around those rules.

By golly, he has tenure!

So we must watch and wait until 2028 while Chuck Schumer continually gets dunked on by Republicans when he isn’t scoring own goals.

DSandra

(1,718 posts)
15. Republicans are laughing at Democrats' commitment to rules and decorum
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 10:09 AM
4 hrs ago

While they tear up democracy and turn America into Russia.

awesomerwb1

(5,036 posts)
11. We get it
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 10:01 AM
4 hrs ago

You think they're the bestest and most awesomenest ever.

More people disagree with you and want the minority party to act like a proper opposition party at a time where the country needs it the most.

If they're not up to it(they're not), they need to let those who are, lead us forward.

MineralMan

(150,858 posts)
12. What I think is irrelevant.
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 10:03 AM
4 hrs ago

How they are chosen is simply some facts. Did I get something wrong?

MineralMan

(150,858 posts)
22. I doubt there will be such a thread.
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 10:19 AM
4 hrs ago

Now that I have written about how Congressional leadership is selected, I don't have anything else to offer on this.

SocialDemocrat61

(7,175 posts)
14. Has any democratic senator or representative
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 10:08 AM
4 hrs ago

said they should step down and be replaced? Asking for a friend. 😉

SocialDemocrat61

(7,175 posts)
24. I don't know of any
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 10:27 AM
4 hrs ago

That's why I asked. In fact, I know of no democratic elected officials officials who have said so. In NYC, Jeffries was going to be primaried but both AOC and Mayor Mamdani denounced it.

MineralMan

(150,858 posts)
26. That's what I thought, too.
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 10:32 AM
4 hrs ago

Frankly, my goal for this post was to provide some details about the process of choosing congressional leadership. As far as I know, there is no way around that process that would enable any group to remove anyone from leadership. Unless the voters and Congress members do it, the leaders are who they are at this time.

It's interesting that several people appear to have misunderstood the information in my OP. I have asked them to point out what I wrote that was incorrect.

SocialDemocrat61

(7,175 posts)
29. Have they?
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 10:39 AM
4 hrs ago

And I do find it interesting the Mamdani and AOC did not support Jeffries being primaried since they would know the actual responsibilities of a legislative caucus leader better than most.

LudwigPastorius

(14,374 posts)
55. Dem. Reps Ro Khanna and Seth Moulton have called for Schumer to relinquish his position.
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 02:18 PM
26 min ago

...but, that was back in November. I believe there has been one other Representative since then, but I can't remember her name.

Anyway they, being House members, aren't exactly going to gain any traction barking at Senators about who they select as a leader.

https://www.politico.com/news/2025/11/10/schumer-is-no-longer-effective-dems-outraged-over-shutdown-deal-00644253

SocialDemocrat61

(7,175 posts)
58. Thanks
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 02:31 PM
13 min ago

Interesting to know. But as you said, as Representatives they really can't do anything about the Senate.

DSandra

(1,718 posts)
16. Imagine if Britain kept Neville Chamberlain than replace him with Winston Churchill...
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 10:15 AM
4 hrs ago

The Nazis might have won the war and Europe would be nothing like it is now.

SocialDemocrat61

(7,175 posts)
25. Which is why I support replacing
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 10:29 AM
4 hrs ago

Trump who is head of government like Chamberlain and Churchill were.

DSandra

(1,718 posts)
39. I'm talking about Democratic Party leadership of course
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 11:26 AM
3 hrs ago

You can't make cowards who make $174,000 regardless into brave fighters.

SocialDemocrat61

(7,175 posts)
42. But we don't have a parliamentary system
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 11:39 AM
3 hrs ago

Schumer or Jeffries don't become President if democrats get majorities in Congress. The role and responsibility of the leader of a party caucus is very different in our government than in those with a parliamentary system.

DSandra

(1,718 posts)
49. Your just making excuses, like the OP
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 01:41 PM
1 hr ago

Just wait till the Republicans essentially outlaw the Democratic party and imprison the party members like so many one party countries... That is the price of making excuses.

Sympthsical

(10,893 posts)
18. Trump's popular with MAGA
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 10:17 AM
4 hrs ago

So I guess we shouldn't say anything critical about him, because it's just not up to us! None of us voted for him - as far as I know - and he is still popular with his base.

Oh well. Guess it's back to doing and saying nothing, folks.

This is . . . some logic that exists.

SocialDemocrat61

(7,175 posts)
31. But we all do vote for President of the U.S.
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 10:42 AM
4 hrs ago

We just don't all vote for every Senator or Representative. The people in their state or district do. Nor do we vote for the caucus leaders, that's up to the members of those caucuses.

Sympthsical

(10,893 posts)
53. I live in California.
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 02:16 PM
28 min ago

I promise you, nothing I do has any bearing on a presidential election. My state is blue until the heat death of the universe.

(Which I am fine with)

SocialDemocrat61

(7,175 posts)
57. I live in New York
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 02:29 PM
15 min ago

New York is deep blue too. But no democratic can win without the electoral votes from California and New York

MineralMan

(150,858 posts)
36. This is DU. We are all Democrats here.
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 10:54 AM
3 hrs ago

So, Trump is not the subject of this thread at all. We all oppose Donald J. Trump.

Apples/Oranges.

Sympthsical

(10,893 posts)
54. You're promoting submissive voicelessness to power
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 02:17 PM
27 min ago

Which, hey, some people certainly like more than others.

W_HAMILTON

(10,236 posts)
56. Trump is also in office because people vote for him regardless of the criticism.
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 02:27 PM
17 min ago

Our side hasn't shown the ability to do that.

Walleye

(44,036 posts)
21. Two guys from Brooklyn, we do get to vote for the guys who vote for them as leaders.
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 10:19 AM
4 hrs ago

Isn’t that the way representative democracy supposed to work?

MineralMan

(150,858 posts)
23. That's exactly how it works.
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 10:22 AM
4 hrs ago

I posted the details of that. Apparently, both men are doing OK in their caucuses and their state and district. They seem quite popular in both areas.

That is how it is supposed to work, and how it apparently does work.

Did I get something wrong about that?

bluestarone

(21,630 posts)
28. Like you say, i will always believe the citizens in THEIR District
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 10:36 AM
4 hrs ago

Know what's best for them, THAT should never change.

MineralMan

(150,858 posts)
32. Yes. That is the basis of our entire system of government.
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 10:43 AM
4 hrs ago

That's what is established in the Constitution. We are a republic made up of 50 states. Our system of government is designed to be fair to all 50 states and for each of them to be represented in Congress.

Further, each state is divided into counties and congressional districts. It elects its own state government, which is more or less based on the Constitution, as well.

It's an imperfect system, but there is no perfect system for governing a nation as large and diverse as ours. It works fairly well, except when it doesn't. Right now, it's not working all that well, and one party has skirted around the edges of the system to distort things. We may need an election or two to get things better aligned.

That is something we can all participate in, state by state and community by community. There are no shortcuts to having a stable democratic republic. It's hard work and requires constant attention.

bluestarone

(21,630 posts)
37. Yea, just saying division will kill us, that's what rethugs are hoping.
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 10:55 AM
3 hrs ago

Now is NOT the time to fight and divide. We have many fights ahead, that's a fact!

DSandra

(1,718 posts)
40. But that's because of party leadership's failure to meet the moment, not miscellaneus squabbles
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 11:28 AM
3 hrs ago

If party leadership is helping America to fall off a cliff, then something needs to be done about it.

betsuni

(28,887 posts)
34. A factual explanation about Democratic leadership needs a trigger warning.
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 10:46 AM
3 hrs ago

Giving Democrats the benefit of the doubt and assuming they're not too stupid/corrupt/complicit to know what they're doing? Oh no no no, it just isn't done. Anger over thinking. Them vs Us. Taking strengths (like how the Democratic Party is a big tent or its policies) and turning it into a weakness to divide and destroy (vague purity tests everyone fails).

DJ Synikus Makisimus

(1,259 posts)
38. Two words: Wall Street
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 11:15 AM
3 hrs ago

The ONLY things that really matter in America are money and the people that have it.

Bobstandard

(2,207 posts)
43. Here's where it falls apart
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 11:43 AM
3 hrs ago
I assume they know what they're doing better than I do, anyhow


Schumer has lived in the DC bubble for over a quarter century. He’s been an elected official for over 40 years. His net worth is estimated to be $60 to $70 millions, most of that made while in office.

Schumer may know what he’s doing but he doesn’t know how you’re doing. He’s been a member of a genteel monied men’s club for so long he has little to no idea what life is like for the average person. In short, he’s so out of touch with the real wold that he doesn’t seem to grasp the urgency of this moment.

I suspect that Schumer is so caught up in the rhythm of business of Capitol Hill that he’s actually less well informed about what’s going on with constituents—and especially their reality based anxieties—than the OP is. Many of us spend an hour or more a day cruising the internet getting news and opinion from a wide variety of sources. I’m pretty sure Schumer doesn’t. I’d be surprised if he can even navigate Instagram or Tik-tok so it’s unlikely he’s ever experienced the hate and vitriol aimed at us libtards. Staffers may tell him or share the ccasional meme but is that enough?

Autumn

(48,865 posts)
48. Absslutely This is exactly right. That long in office and making as much money as they make
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 12:15 PM
2 hrs ago

from special interests distances them from the very people they are supposed to represent.


Thank you for your post.

PJMcK

(24,889 posts)
44. There's a process to remove them as leaders without them losing their seats
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 11:48 AM
2 hrs ago

If House and Senate Democrats don't reelect them to their leadership positions, others will take their places.

Constituents from other states could tell their Representatives and Senators to elect new leaders. That's the power non-New Yorkers can employ to get new leadership.

I am a New York voter and if Schumer is the Democrat, I'll vote for him but if someone else is the Democratic nominee they'll get my vote. I'd rather have Schumer in the Senate than his last opponent, Joe Pinion.

Incidentally, I don't live in Jeffries district so I can't vote for him. The curiosity is that George Conway is vying for a Democratic seat in Congress from my district. Even though he's a former Republican, if he's the Democratic nominee, he'll get my vote.

To be clear, I'm more than disappointed in both Schumer and Jeffries but they're who we've got.

I always vote for the Democrat because these days, even a mediocre Democrat is better than any Republican.

SocialDemocrat61

(7,175 posts)
45. My grandfather use to say
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 11:50 AM
2 hrs ago

the worst democrat on his worst day is still better than the best republican on his best day.

LudwigPastorius

(14,374 posts)
51. If you look at polls of "favorability" ratings,...
Fri Feb 6, 2026, 02:06 PM
38 min ago

Jeffries is unpopular, but Schumer is deeply unpopular (like, almost twice the "unfavorable" numbers as Trump)

Whether that would be enough to get Senate Democrats to overthrow him, I don't know. But historically, Minority Leaders aren't the most liked people.

In early 2024, then-Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell had just about the same numbers as Schumer does now.

It seems that vilification for "NOT FIGHTING!" kind of comes with the job and the limits of power it has.

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