The Court Packing Deadline
A governing coalition tries to expand the supreme court before an expected adverse ruling, triggering a legitimacy crisis before the bill is even signed.
A leaked draft opinion suggests the Supreme Court is days away from striking down the governing coalition's signature law. In response, party leadership moves an emergency bill to expand the Court before the ruling can land.
You are the Senate Majority Leader
The Situation Room
>The White House says failure means the entire governing agenda dies by the weekend.
>Moderate senators warn that rushing the bill could permanently delegitimize both Congress and the Court.
>Mass demonstrations are already forming outside the Capitol, each side claiming democracy itself is under attack.
Internal Briefing Notes
• Court expansion is legally possible through statute, but politically explosive because it changes the perceived referee during live play.
• Once institutional legitimacy cracks, even a formally lawful maneuver can trigger durable constitutional retaliation by the next governing majority.
• Timing matters: acting before a ruling looks like regime defense; acting after a ruling looks like revenge.
Escalation Window
Reveal each phase to see how the situation deteriorates.
If you hesitate, your coalition loses its agenda. If you rush, the Court may never recover legitimacy. What do you do?
Choose your response. There are no good options.
You may save the law, but ignite a raw legitimacy war between branches and parties.
You preserve more procedural legitimacy, but likely surrender your governing project in the meantime.
You might de-escalate the crisis, but only by gambling your coalition on a deal the opposition may never honor.
Related Entities
Explore the institutions, countries, and actors involved in this scenario.
United States
Federal presidential constitutional republic in North America. Power is divided across the presidency, Congress, the states, and the federal courts. National politics is dominated by the Democratic and Republican parties, but third parties and independents still shape the broader system.
Supreme Court of the United States
Highest court in the United States. Exercises judicial review and serves as the final interpreter of federal law and the Constitution.
