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Showing Original Post only (View all)Politico: I Watched Orban Destroy Hungary's Democracy. Here's My Advice for the Trump Era. [View all]
Politico - (archived: https://archive.ph/0atrF ) I Watched Orbán Destroy Hungarys Democracy. Heres My Advice for the Trump Era.
To dismantle the machinery of autocracy, you first need to understand how it works.

President-elect Donald Trump is following a playbook pioneered by Hungarys Viktor Orbán. | Brandon Bell/Getty Images
By Gábor Scheiring
11/23/2024 12:00 PM EST
Gábor Scheiring is a former member of the Hungarian parliament and an assistant professor of comparative politics at Georgetown University Qatar.
Many believed that after his first term as president, Donald Trump would end up in the dustbin of history. Now Trump is back, and the United States is about to be ruled for the second time by a right-wing populist.
Trumps goal this time is to remake the American government to enhance his power. He isnt the first modern right-wing populist to attempt this he is following a playbook pioneered by Hungarys Viktor Orbán. I lived through Orbáns power grab as a member of Hungarys parliament and have been researching populism since. Ive learned a few things along the way that might help Trumps opponents understand how he won and how they can fight back.
First off, its important to understand that America isnt the first country to face this kind of threat to its democracy, and it also isnt something external. Autocratic populism is not a virus the U.S. caught from the exotic East, from Russia or Hungary. Modern-day autocracies come to power through elections, leading to electoral autocracies. These regimes are built from within the democratic system.
This is what Orbán did so successfully, which is why he has inspired other autocrats. Americas radical conservatives have been paying attention. Steve Bannon has called Orbán Trump before Trump. Vice President-elect JD Vance has cited Orbán as an inspiration, who we could learn from in the United States.
Orbáns power grab program runs on two components that you can think of as hardware and software. The populist hardware consists of hijacked institutions. The software is made up of populist discourses and narratives that are used to create and enlist the consent of the ruled.
Dismantling the hardware of the Orbán-Trump project requires first defeating its software, so lets start there.
/snip
To dismantle the machinery of autocracy, you first need to understand how it works.

President-elect Donald Trump is following a playbook pioneered by Hungarys Viktor Orbán. | Brandon Bell/Getty Images
By Gábor Scheiring
11/23/2024 12:00 PM EST
Gábor Scheiring is a former member of the Hungarian parliament and an assistant professor of comparative politics at Georgetown University Qatar.
Many believed that after his first term as president, Donald Trump would end up in the dustbin of history. Now Trump is back, and the United States is about to be ruled for the second time by a right-wing populist.
Trumps goal this time is to remake the American government to enhance his power. He isnt the first modern right-wing populist to attempt this he is following a playbook pioneered by Hungarys Viktor Orbán. I lived through Orbáns power grab as a member of Hungarys parliament and have been researching populism since. Ive learned a few things along the way that might help Trumps opponents understand how he won and how they can fight back.
First off, its important to understand that America isnt the first country to face this kind of threat to its democracy, and it also isnt something external. Autocratic populism is not a virus the U.S. caught from the exotic East, from Russia or Hungary. Modern-day autocracies come to power through elections, leading to electoral autocracies. These regimes are built from within the democratic system.
This is what Orbán did so successfully, which is why he has inspired other autocrats. Americas radical conservatives have been paying attention. Steve Bannon has called Orbán Trump before Trump. Vice President-elect JD Vance has cited Orbán as an inspiration, who we could learn from in the United States.
Orbáns power grab program runs on two components that you can think of as hardware and software. The populist hardware consists of hijacked institutions. The software is made up of populist discourses and narratives that are used to create and enlist the consent of the ruled.
Dismantling the hardware of the Orbán-Trump project requires first defeating its software, so lets start there.
/snip
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Politico: I Watched Orban Destroy Hungary's Democracy. Here's My Advice for the Trump Era. [View all]
Dennis Donovan
Nov 2024
OP
Trump and his henchmen will never tell their MAGA followers they want to "destroy democracy,"
sop
Nov 2024
#6
In the past few years Orban has met alone with Republicans and Trump to advise them on how to do an autocratic takeover.
jalan48
Nov 2024
#7
Yep. They have bought into the fantasy land of Jesus and returning to the good old days, dragging us with them.
jalan48
Nov 2024
#18
Their fantasy that Trump is the new religious lord and savior is mind blowing.
Irish_Dem
Nov 2024
#19
It's a depressing situation. I'm focusing on my local volunteer stuff and it's helping a lot.
jalan48
Nov 2024
#20
I think it's impossible to reach most white working class R voters no matter what you do.
TRHST82
Nov 2024
#35
The oligarchs believe they no longer have to be stealthy about their takeover.
Hermit-The-Prog
Nov 2024
#45
This brand of fascism is a cancer. It is destroying democracies left and right.
Initech
Nov 2024
#49
Great article! The links provided in the article lead to several other great articles.
KPN
Nov 2024
#63