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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forumsimportant read - Slate "Why Isn't Trump President for Life Yet?"
He is following the same playbook as other authoritarian populists around the world. Hes just bad at itso far.
By YASCHA MOUNK
https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2018/03/trump-is-following-the-same-playbook-as-other-authoritarian-populists-hes-just-much-worse-at-it.html
A week after the horrific shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High in Parkland, Florida, that left 17 dead and 14 injured, Donald Trump publicly scolded members of his own party: They have great power over you people, he said to a room filled with shell-shocked Republicans. Some of you are petrified by the NRA.
The presidents willingness to follow public opinion, rather than the orthodoxy of his own party, on a highly emotional issue with mass support opened the door for a major political win. If Trump actually decided to use his vast powers to push through a historic compromise on gun control, he would finally be able to cash in on the claim he has made since he declared his candidacy: that he is a deal-maker who can deliver for the people because he isnt beholden to the political class.
Voters who are very liberal or highly politically engaged would likely dismiss such a move as an uncharacteristic aberration. But there are few of those. The bulk of Americansthose who dont pay much attention to politics or have ideologically muddled viewswould probably start to temper their negative opinion of the president. And if that result then served as a blueprint for similar bargains on other issues, average Americans might just start to like him.
From Hugo Chávez in Venezuela to Jaroslaw Kaczyński in Poland and from Viktor Orbán in Hungary to Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Turkey, many populists around the world have remained sufficiently popular for a long enough span of time to concentrate vast powers in their own hands. Trump has some important commonalities with them. Like them, for example, he is a master at riling up his base with lofty promises of big improvements and urgent warnings about imminent dangers.
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Long read - many provocative, scary parts...worth reading to see one person's view of how close we are to real danger.
Girard442
(6,082 posts)...I can think of a way I'd be OK with that.
NRaleighLiberal
(60,018 posts)RandomAccess
(5,210 posts)The good news/bad news in this really good, important article:
But it is also scary: If American institutions have, so far, stood up to Donald Trump, the reason for this seems to have at least as much to do with his personal failings as it does with the structural differences between the United States and countries like Poland or Venezuela. If Trump, or one of his successors, should learn to emulate the playbook developed by authoritarian populists around the world, he too could concentrate enormous powers in his own hands.