What began as a tactical brainstorm between Donald Trump and House Speaker Mike Johnson has quickly become a referendum on how politics is done in the twenty-first century. A full-scale Republican National Convention before the 2026 midterms would attempt to fuse every scattered race into one emotional crescendo, transforming routine congressional contests into a high-stakes, televised saga about control, loyalty, and identity. It would be less about policy than performance, less about districts than drama.
Yet the same spectacle that could supercharge turnout might also expose the hollowness of constant crisis. If voters tire of endless theater, the backlash could be brutal, punishing candidates who wagered everything on noise over nuance. Whatever the outcome, that Detroit call now stands as a line in the sand: from campaigns that used media, to campaigns completely consumed by it.