• Donald Trump decides to demolish the East Wing of the White House

    [Obtained by The Washington Post]

    It won’t interfere with the current building. It won’t be. It’ll be near it but not touching it — and pays total respect to the existing building, which I’m the biggest fan of,” Trump said during an executive order signing in July. “It’s my favorite. It’s my favorite place. I love it.”

    That was then. That was Donald Trump. Now, because he wanted to and because he could, the wannabe strongman elected last November to live in the house for the duration of his four year term, Trump decided to demolished the East Wing.

    It’s a fitting metaphor for the Trump administration, which has taken a wrecking ball to the Constitution, the separation of powers, and the rule of law.

  • White House disinformation: It’s lies all the way down

    Chicago’s a mess. You have an incompetent mayor—grossly incompetent. We have a governor that refuses to admit he has problems. Everybody knows how bad it is. This open borders nightmare flooded our country with fentanyl and with people that shouldn’t be here. Some of the worst people on earth and illicit drugs decimated American communities and left us with the largest law enforcement challenge in our country’s history.

    They need help badly. Chicago desperately needs help. We don’t want to lose Chicago.… We want to save these places.… We’re not going to allow this kind of savagery to destroy our society anymore. We’re stopping it. Doing it one by one.
    — President Trump narration

    The propaganda / trolling video released by the White House followed the September 30 raid by federal agents, as described by PBS:

    The music begins low and ominous, with the video showing searchlights skimming along a Chicago apartment building and heavily armed immigration agents storming inside. Guns are drawn. Unmarked cars fill the streets. Agents rappel from a Black Hawk helicopter.
    But quickly the soundtrack grows more stirring and the video — edited into a series of dramatic shots and released by the Department of Homeland Security days after the Sept. 30 raid — shows agents leading away shirtless men, their hands zip-tied behind their backs.
    Authorities said they were targeting the Venezuelan gang Tren de Aragua, though they also said only two of the 27 immigrants arrested were gang members. They gave few details on the arrests.

    The Daily Beast, spying palm trees, reported nearly two weeks ago that much of video content had been filmed last April in Florida, not Chicago. A week after the Daily Beast report, Agence France-Presse dug a bit deeper. In fact, the videos purporting to show the chaos in Chicago, were actually filmed in Texas, South Carolina, Nebraska, California, and Arizona, as well as Florida. There were a number of clips from Chicago as well, but those weren’t scary enough and couldn’t possibly match the Trump rhetoric (in the video) untethered to the facts on the ground and blind to the state sanctioned violence he has inflicted in Democratic cities.

    Meanwhile, Tom Homan, White House Border Czar, is fine with police state violence at the hands of masked agents. But he’s upset about rhetoric, not from an administration directing militarized federal agencies, but from No Kings marchers.

    “The bloodshed is not over if we don’t address the rhetoric.”

    Homan: "At the No Kings protest, I watched more of the rhetoric. They've lost their minds. And I tell you: the bloodshed is not over if we don't address the rhetoric."

    Aaron Rupar (@atrupar.com) 2025-10-22T15:25:38.274Z

    It’s a topsy turvy world in the Trump White House and the MAGA Republican Party.

  • MAGA embraces King Trump, while millions of Americans proclaim ‘No Kings’

    Yes, JD Vance has a Bluesky account. And Donald Trump reposted the above reverie on his Truth Social account. (The vice president knows how to please president. Good Veep, good Veep.)

    And what’s the pretend king’s wish regarding the millions of Americans who reject kings?

    Trump posts AI video showing him literally dumping shit on America

    Aaron Rupar (@atrupar.com) 2025-10-19T02:36:49.465Z

    Aren’t the VP and the President masters of satire (as Speaker Mike Johnson insists)? Ha ha ha!

    Anne Applebaum suggests why this imagery is critical for the wannabe authoritarian/pretend king:

    For those using the oldest tools in the authoritarian playbook, the nature of the smear is unimportant. What matters is the intention behind it: Don’t answer your critics. Don’t argue with them. Don’t let them win over anyone else. Describe them as dangerous radicals even when they wear frog costumes. Imply, without evidence, that they were bribed to speak out, because there can’t possibly be any sincere idealists who criticize the Party and its Leader out of a genuine desire to help other Americans. Dump AI-generated sewage on their heads to discourage anyone else from joining them. And if they keep coming out, make the messages even harsher.

    Don’t dare disagree with President Donald J. Trump. Whether he’s a king or an autocrat or an out of control president, dissenters can’t be tolerated.

    It’s a hate America rally. — Mike Johnson

    Mike Johnson on No Kings: "We refer to it by its more accurate description — the Hate America Rally. You're gonna bring together the Marxists, the socialists, the antifa advocates, the anarchists, and the pro-Hamas wing of the far left Democrat Party. That is the modern Democratic Party."

    Aaron Rupar (@atrupar.com) 2025-10-17T14:12:09.139Z

    The White House agrees that dissenters are beyond the pale. “The Democrat Party’s main constituency is made up of Hamas terrorists, illegal aliens, and violent criminals.” — Karoline Leavitt

    Leavitt: "The Democrat Party's main constituency is made up of Hamas terrorists, illegal aliens, and violent criminals."

    Aaron Rupar (@atrupar.com) 2025-10-16T17:09:37.030Z

    The day before the rallies

    Ezra Levin (co-founder of Indivisible) talked with Dana Bash about the goals of the second No Kings day of protests:

    Our enemy here is not Trump; it’s not the regime. It’s not Democrats who refuse to fight back. Those are opponents from time to time in the campaign. Our enemy is fatalism and nihilism and cynicism. The sense that we are just victims of world events and there’s just nothing that we can do.
    By showing up in historic numbers we burst that bubble. We show that we are not afraid, that we can indeed exercise our First Amendment rights. That’s goal one.
    But a protest, even a historic protest — this will be the largest peaceful protest in modern American history — even something as big as this is a one day protest. And the real measure of success is not just in how big and how peaceful and how joyful it is. It’s also how many people plug in to on the ground organizing going forward. And that’s what we’ve got to go next.

    Five million Americans turned out — in protests across 2,600 venues — without violent clashes or arrests.

    Gloria Molina Grand Park, October 18, 2025

  • It’s Tuesday in Trump’s America

    ICE in Chicago

    Another day, another Kavanaugh stop.

    U.S. citizens say they’re also being questioned by federal immigration agents for proof of citizenship.
    Maria Greeley, 44, had just finished working a double shift at the Beach Bar on Ohio Street earlier this month when she said she was surrounded by three federal agents who grabbed her, forced her hands behind her back and zip tied her.
    Headphones in, Greeley had been focused on getting home to her two dogs for a walk. Instead, she said she was detained by masked agents who did not answer when she asked for names. They questioned her for an hour, she said.
    Greeley, who was born at Illinois Masonic hospital and is adopted, carries a copy of her passport just in case she runs into federal agents.
    “I am Latina and I am a service worker,” Greeley said. “I fit the description of what they’re looking for now.”
    During the encounter, Greeley said they told her she “doesn’t look like” a Greeley.
    “They said this isn’t real, they kept telling me I’m lying, I’m a liar,” Greeley recalled. “I told them to look in the rest of my wallet, I have my credit cards, my insurance.”
    When the agents let her go, Greeley got home and screamed when she saw the shadow on her door. Days after the incident, Greeley said, it’s still “terrifying.”

    This is happening because the Roberts Court, still celebrating “bold and unhesitating action” by a Republican president, has supercharged Trump’s lawless. police state occupations of American cities. 

    The First Branch takes a pass

    To bring a democracy under authoritarian control, you need more than a strongman. You need politicians who will assure the public, as we slide toward one-man rule, that nothing odd is happening. That’s the role Johnson is playing in Donald Trump’s takeover of America.

    Will Saleton at The Bullwark provides ample detail. As I’ve noted before, Project 2025’s authoritarian takeover would not be possible if not for the GOP’s takeover of all three branches of the federal government. Mike Johnson (along with John Thune and John Roberts) are onboard with this anti-democratic project.

    The Constitution created three branches of government with shared powers. The framers didn’t expect men to be angels; they foresaw men like Trump, Johnson, et al. They designed the Constitution anticipating that ambitious men (whether corrupt or compromised or not) would jealously guard the prerogatives of their respective branches — serving as checks on overreach by the other two branches.

    The current Republican Congress has no interest in checking an off the rails Executive. Trump’s domination of the Republican Party, and the movement conservatives and billionaires who stacked the courts, corrupted the legislative branch, and paved the way for a wannabe authoritarian in the White House, have enfeebled constitutional safeguards.

  • Donald Trump (and his MAGA crew) can’t remember that he was president in 2020

    [Donald J. Trump -Truth Social]

    What a SCAM – DO SOMETHING!!! indeed.

    As you’ve probably noticed, this MAGA sleight of hand (blaming something, which happened on Trump’s watch, on Joe Biden) has happened frequently. Aaron Blake has noticed as well (“‘Who was president in 2020?’ Trump and GOP want you to think it was Biden“). In this case — just after the new year — it was 2021 and Trump was still in the White House. Biden wouldn’t arrive for a few more weeks.

    Trump, ever under the spell of MAGA-friendly T V, social media, and websites — as well as baseless conspiracy theories, posted his bogus claim after seeing “reports Friday in right-leaning media that appeared to conflate the FBI’s response to the Jan. 6 attack — the bureau has long acknowledged sending agents and support personnel to the Capitol after the breach to help restore order — with conspiracy theories that the bureau embedded undercover agents to ignite the attack in the first place.”

    The Politico report sorts out the truth from the lies.

    Let’s not forget that the January 6 Capitol riot occurred after President Trump summoned the crowd and fired them up to overturn his November 2020 defeat. And, in January 2025, after his return to the White House, Trump granted clemency to 1,600 supporters, including those convicted of violently assaulting police officers that day, dozens with prior felony convictions, and even a handful of men convicted of seditious conspiracy.

  • Americans experience straight up authoritarian assaults by federal agents

    We are getting new reports about a chilling and downright shocking escalation of ICE tactics against the residents of Chicago.
    In the middle of the night hundreds of armed federal agents and police, backed up by riot trucks, smoke grenades and helicopters, breached fences and busted doors in an immigration raid on an entire apartment building on the city’s southside.
    They pulled dozens of residents from their homes in zip ties, including children – some of them without any clothes. They then held some outside for hours and dragged the others into rented vans. — Chris Hayes, October 2, 2025

    The victims included American citizens (men, women, and children), who were rousted from their homes, zip tied, and forcibly detained for hours behind the building. They were released only after the raiders verified that there were no outstanding warrants against them.

    This conduct by armed federal agents clearly violates the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and — a string of 2025 shadow docket rulings by the Roberts Court notwithstanding — established precedents by the United States Supreme Court.

    In Los Angeles earlier this year, a U.S. District judge — after a trial challenging the roving patrols, arrests without reasonable suspicion, and denial of legal counsel — ruled the raids illegal.

    “Is it illegal to conduct roving patrols which identify people based upon race alone, aggressively question them, and then detain them without a warrant, without their consent, and without reasonable suspicion that they are without status? Yes, it is,” she wrote.

    Her decision was stayed by the Republican justices on the Supreme Court in another shadow docket decision — in an unsigned, one-paragraph order (Noem v. Vasquez Perdomo). Justice Brett Kavanaugh, in a concurrence, dismissed concerns over “brief stops for questioning” — which Justice Sonia Sotomayer, in dissent, rejected as contrary to what government agents were actually doing to undocumented immigrants and U.S. citizens alike.

    Now Kavanaugh stops have become a thing. (The name is inspired by SCOTUS-sanctioned Terry stops, which allowed police, with reasonable suspicion of criminal activity, to briefly stop-and-frisk individuals.) Masked federal agents inflict performative violence on the perceived enemies of the man in the White House.

    State sanctioned MAGA violence unleashed

    Trump has spent years threatening his enemies, including — first and foremost — Democrats. Yesterday On Truth Social, the president posted a graphic characterizing Democrats as “THE PARTY OF HATE, EVIL, AND SATAN.” Trump’s chief White House advisor, Stephen Miller, has said, “The Democrat Party is not a political party. It is a domestic extremist organization.” It is no coincidence that Trump’s militarized agents have gone after Democratic states and cities.

    In speaking with the nation’s military leaders this past week, Trump even suggested using our cities as “training grounds for our military.” Not just any cities, “the ones that are run by radical left Democrats.” His meandering remarks also included this:

    America is under invasion from within. We’re under invasion from within. No different than a foreign enemy, but more difficult in any ways because they don’t wear uniforms. At least when they’re wearing a uniform you can take them out.”

    Trump to generals: "America is under invasion from within. We're under invasion from within. No different than a foreign enemy, but more difficult in any ways because they don't wear uniforms. At least when they're wearing a uniform you can take them out."

    Aaron Rupar (@atrupar.com) 2025-09-30T14:09:27.988Z

    “War ravaged” Portland

    Now Trump has targeted Portland with federalized National Guard troops, even though the Oregon governor suggested that the city was not under siege. Trump pushed back:

    “I spoke to the governor, she was very nice,” Trump said. “But I said, ‘Well wait a minute, am I watching things on television that are different from what’s happening? My people tell me different.’ They are literally attacking and there are fires all over the place…it looks like terrible.”

    The city’s mayor responded, after multiple sources reported that the president has been watching Fox News Channel, which has included five year old images of Portland during the George Floyd protests:

    “The number of necessary troops is zero,” Portland’s mayor, Keith Wilson, said. “I’ve been so deeply disappointed to see the footage from a half decade ago recycled,” he added, referring to a recent Fox News reported cited by Trump that misled viewers by wrongly presenting video from a 2020 protest in Portland as new.

    The Democratic governor of Illinois has responded to our lawless, vengeful, TV-addled president:

    ICE is running around the Loop harassing people for not being white. Just a year ago, that was illegal in the United States. Now ICE is making it commonplace. That’s not making America great.
    In any other country, if federal agents fired upon journalists and protesters when unprovoked, what would we call it? If federal agents marched down streets harassing civilians and demanding their papers, what would we say? I don’t think we’d have trouble calling it what it is: authoritarianism.

    Governor JB Pritzker added:

    For Donald Trump and the MAGAs in Congress, this is not about fighting crime or about public safety. This is about sowing fear and intimidation and division among Americans. It was about creating a pretext that sends armed military troops into our communities. This is about consolidating power in Donald Trump’s hands. What he plans to do with that power now or during the 2026 elections should worry all of us.
    When you add to that the Trump’s administration’s efforts to label as dangerous free speech critical of him, White House senior staff calling the Democratic Party fascist, the Trump-appointed FCC chair threatening to revoke broadcast licenses and the approval of a merger in order to silence late night comedians, Trump’s threats to jail political opponents, you cannot call this anything except an attack on the Constitution of the United States.

    Pritzker: "For Donald Trump and the MAGAs in Congress, this is not about fighting crime or public safety … this is about consolidating power in Donald Trump's hands. What he plans to do with that power now or during the 2026 elections should worry all of us."

    Aaron Rupar (@atrupar.com) 2025-09-29T20:26:40.436Z

  • President Trump orders Department of Justice to go after his opponents

    [Donald J. Trump on Truth Social]

    In a social media post (that may have been intended as a DM to the Attorney General of the United States), Donald Trump directs AG Pam Bondi to prosecute three political opponents immediately!

    Complaining about the

    “same old story as last time, all talk, no action. Nothing is being done. What about Comey, Adam “shifty” Schiff, Leticia??? They’re all guilty as hell, but nothing is going to be done.”

    Trump demands, “JUSTICE MUST BE SERVED, NOW!!!

    Authoritarian Playbook

    Well, not justice, actually. Retribution. As pledged during the 2024 campaign. “I am your voice. I am your justice. And for those who have been wrong, been betrayed. I am your retribution.” But, make no mistake, he’s speaking for himself. “I hate my opponent. And I don’t want the best for them,” he said yesterday at a memorial rally for Charlie Kirk. That’s been clear for a while.

    The mainstream media has characterized Trump’s Department of Justice going after his political enemies as veering from DOJ norms established after Watergate. That was a half-century ago. But the norm for DOJ (and for presidents) goes much further back, as Jonathan Bernstein notes:

    I’ve seen a bunch of people refer to Trump violating post-Watergate rules about interference with the prosecutions, but don’t be fooled by that. Those practices only formalized what people always thought was supposed to be happening all along. We know this because (1) Nixon hid what he was doing, and (2) when Nixon’s interference with the Justice Department was exposed, everyone basically freaked out.

    Until this lawless president and the Roberts Court’s Republican-majority opinion (unmoored from well-established legal scholarship, judicial precedent, and a plain reading of the Constitution) in Trump v. United States, no one thought that DOJ or U.S. presidents operated this way. (In other nominally democratic countries, with autocratic leaders amassing control, yes.)

    This is an unleashed wannabe authoritarian bullying our nation. We’ve never seen anything like it. Not in our country. Not on this scale. Not right out in the open. Not until Trump and the Roberts Court (and a supine Republican Congress) made it happen.

  • Normal politics sustains democracy; violence destroys it

    In the ten days since my last post, Charlie Kirk, co-founder of Turning Point USA, was shot and killed. This is a tragedy for Kirk’s family (including two children so young they will have few memories of their father) and friends (including a number close to the White House).

    It is also a severe blow to American democracy. Murder is wrong. Political violence, with its pervasive, malignant consequences, compounds the calamity.

    I know more about Kirk today than I did a week ago, when I recognized his name just because of his affiliation with Turning Point USA. I was especially distressed to hear of his assassination because it is another mark of our democratic decline at a perilous time. And it brought to mind something I’d read a day earlier in Timothy Shenk’s Left Adrift: What Happened to Liberal Politics.

    The passage resonated for me when I heard of Kirk’s death. Shenk relates an experience of Democratic political consultant Stan Greenberg, who was practicing his craft in Israel. Emphasis added:

    The relentless pressure of Israeli politics was like nothing Greenberg had experienced before. It could be exhilarating, especially when you could leave it behind with a flight back home. But he thought voters were sick of it. After spending time in the country, Greenberg came to one overarching conclusion: “Israelis longed to be normal.” The subjects that came up in conversations with voters were the same ones he had seen with focus groups in the US and UK—jobs, schools, pensions. “Normal things,” Greenberg said. “That’s all they wanted.”

    The US and much of the world in the more than two decades since Greenberg’s observation have by now become more like Israel. We are no longer normal, as Shenk noted within a dozen pages: “Wars for the national soul were breaking out across the globe. Israel wasn’t the exception. It was just ahead of the curve.”

    Normal politics is essential for democracy. A whole bunch of stuff is required to make our democratic institutions work: respect for folks who disagree with us; acknowledging the legitimacy of their participation; and adhering to democratic rules of the road to guide our safe passage. Intense polarization, a closely divided nation, and fierce tribal loyalties crowd out what, until a couple of decades ago, was normal.

    Without spelling out in detail the conditions and constraints of normal politics, it is clear that violence is antithetical to the enterprise. Bargaining, compromise, the willingness to accept half a loaf at times, and the determination to engage in the process again in the future — all this represents the give and take of politics.

    That’s the way it works when it works. When things are normal.

    Violence shatters these possibilities. It’s distressing to live in a time when we are so far from normal.

  • Roberts Court rules for Trump and against the Fourth Amendment

    [La Cucaracha by Lalo Alcaraz, June 11, 2025.]

    Fourth Amendment: The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.

    Ruling in favor of the Trump administration once again, the Roberts Court removed a stay placed by a district court that barred — until the district judge could decide the case on its merits — masked government agents from detaining anyone who looks Latino, speaks with an accent, and appears to have a low-wage job at (for instance) a car wash, Home Depot, or restaurant.

    The majority offered no reason or explanation for its decision (Kristi Noem, Secretary, Department of Homeland Security, Et Al. v. Pedro Vasquez Perdomo, Et Al. On Application for Stay), though Justice Brett Kavanaugh offered a concurrence. Justice Sonia Sotomayer issued a written dissent (joined by Justices Kagan and Jackson). Her objections centered on the court’s abuse of the “emergency docket,” on the facts on the ground, and on judicial history regarding the Fourth Amendment:

    During the raids, teams of armed and masked agents pulled up to car washes, tow yards, farms, and parks and began seizing individuals on sight, often before asking a single question.

    The district court found that stopping individuals was unlawful because the basis for the stops failed to satisfy the Fourth Amendment’s requirement of reasonable suspicion.

    Instead of allowing the District Court to consider these troubling allegations in the normal course, a majority of this Court decides to take the once-extraordinary step of staying the District Court’s order. That decision is yet another grave misuse of our emergency docket. We should not have to live in a country where the Government can seize anyone who looks Latino, speaks Spanish, and appears to work a low wage job. Rather than stand idly by while our constitutional freedoms are lost, I dissent.

    In defiance of prior judicial decisions and the plain text of the Fourth Amendment:

    The Government, and now the concurrence, has all but declared that all Latinos, U. S. citizens or not, who work low wage jobs are fair game to be seized at any time, taken away from work, and held until they provide proof of their legal status to the agents’ satisfaction.

    She rejects Justice Kavenaugh’s claim (in his concurrence) that agents were merely engaging in “brief stops for questioning,” pointing to evidence that American citizens have been roughed up and hauled away.

    They are seizing people using firearms, physical violence, and warehouse detentions. Nor are undocumented immigrants the only ones harmed by the Government’s conduct. United States citizens are also being seized, taken from their jobs, and prevented from working to support themselves and their families.

    Countless people in the Los Angeles area have been grabbed, thrown to the ground, and handcuffed simply because of their looks, their accents, and the fact they make a living by doing manual labor. Today, the Court needlessly subjects countless more to these exact same indignities.

    The Republican majority on the United States Supreme Court continues to make decisions consistent with the policy preferences of the justices and in favor of the leader of the MAGA Republican Party. As usual in its shadow docket rulings, it offers no written opinion explaining the majority view.

  • Donald Trump roughs up our democracy. Some Americans, not all, push back.

    Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.

    Last week, Daniel Ziblatt (“Warning From Weimar: Why Bargaining With Authoritarians Fails”), reviewing a series of “catastrophic miscalculations—each rooted in short-term maneuvering and self-justification—[that] paved the way for Hitler’s ascent,” draws some lessons for the United States in 2025. “The collapse of the Weimar Republic was not inevitable.” It came about only after mainstream politicians thought they could contain or outmaneuver or compromise with Hitler.

    No democratic constitution is self-enforcing, not even ones much older than the Weimar Republic was in the early 1930s. Citizens and leaders must defend democratic institutions whenever they are threatened and whatever the scale of the threat.

    Democracy rarely dies in a single moment. It is chipped away via abdication: rationalizations and compromises as those with power and influence tell themselves that yielding just a little ground will keep them safe or that finding common ground with a disrupter is more practical than standing against him. This is the enduring lesson of Weimar: extremism never triumphs on its own. It succeeds because others enable it—because of their ambition, because of their fear, or because they misjudge the dangers of small concessions. In the end, however, those who empower an autocrat often surrender not only their democracy but also the very influence they once hoped to preserve.

    Trump’s America 2025

    Is there a lesson in the Weimar history that resonates in the United States today? Plenty of observers (especially political scientists who have studied democratic decline) think so.

    Norman Ornstein (“Our guardrails are failing us”) looks at “the brutal reality in America” today:

    The movement of National Guard troops and armored vehicles into D.C. has nothing to do with an imaginary violent crime wave—underscored by the fact that the troops are generally nowhere near the areas where crime is more prevalent. It is a beta test for using the military to suppress dissent and intimidate political opponents and to create the conditions for invoking the Insurrection Act, suspending elections, and declaring martial law, backed by military force.
    Meanwhile, critical entities of government have been blown up, public safety and national security are endangered, and the rule of law is in shambles as the federal government is used to intimidate and punish Trump’s adversaries and those whose policies he does not like; illegal rescissions eviscerate programs lawfully appropriated and authorized by Congress; and we’re witnessing a level of presidential corruption far greater than in every administration in history combined. Every characteristic of an authoritarian regime—from shaking down law firms and universities to hijacking culture to trying to erase and rewrite history to undermining free and fair elections—is underway.

    Note Ornstein’s fear that Trump might suspend elections. In December 2024, Ziblatt (with co-author Steven Levitsky) surveyed the authoritarian threat posed by Trump. Things look much worse now than they did last December. Ziblatt voiced concerns about Trump “going after the democratic opposition in ways that undermine competition. So it’s not about changing the rules, but really attacking civil society, attacking the opposition.” Trump has attacked civil society and the opposition; has tried to undermine electoral competition; and has also sought to change the rules on elections and reapportionment. Ornstein’s fear is more credible in September 2025 than it would have been last December.

    Yet, as Ornstein notes, the business community, Republicans in the House and the Senate, the press, the billionaires who own media outfits, the Republican majority on the Supreme Court, and other institutions and individuals are either celebrating or shrugging their shoulders at what Trump is up to or just lying low to make the best of things.

    It is unnerving for Democrats (who regard themselves defenders of democracy) how meager the resistance to Trump’s authoritarian moves has been. Civil society has proven to be more of a pushover, than a bulwark.

    Ed Kilgore has recognized how far we’ve come (“Democrats Can’t Afford to Ignore Trump’s Creeping Fascism”) in the first few months of Trump’s second term. He suggests that Democrats cannot overlook Trump’s “criminal lawlessness” going forward (even if warnings about Trump’s “threat to democracy” didn’t resonate in 2024):

    Trump no longer represents a prospective “threat to democracy” who might fail to follow through on his thuggish authoritarian rhetoric, just as he often did during his amateurish first term. Depending on how you view his trajectory, he poses at the very least an imminent danger to democracy and is arguably in the process of converting America into an authoritarian regime. Nearly every step he has taken since last November, from building an administration stuffed with MAGA shock troops, to relentless, almost hourly claims of new presidential turf, to unprecedented assaults on private businesses and universities, to the rapid development of a national police force, shows that something like Viktor Orban’s Hungary — formally still a democracy, but under rigid one-party control — is Trump’s goal. 

    In that scenario, competitive authoritarianism, Trump might undermine free and fair elections without actually calling them off. He has tried a version of this, culminating in January 2021, and has continued to cast doubt on the legitimacy of elections whenever the result might go against him.

    And that’s not the half of it. As each of our critics have noted, Trump’s lawless, unconstitutional assaults have hardly been confined to undermining democratic elections.

    What we’ve witnessed isn’t close to normal. Not close to the rule of law or to the Constitution as jurists and scholars have regarded it for decades. Not close to traditional views of checks and balances and a limited presidency.

    Trump on deploying the National Guard to Chicago: "I have the right to do anything I want to do. I'm the president of the United States."

    Aaron Rupar (@atrupar.com) 2025-08-26T19:25:32.377Z

    A divided nation

    And yet, most Americans are hardly in an uproar about what’s going on. Seven months into Trump’s (second) first year, the country couldn’t be more divided.

    Consider this Gallup poll (August 2025):

    Three-quarters of Republicans — 76% — believe things are going well enough. They are fine with Trump’s autocratic rule. While only 0.4% of Democrats are pleased with the country’s direction, as are 25% of Independents.

    In a polarized era, perhaps this isn’t surprising. But it’s scary that perhaps a third of the country is prepared to reject (what I regard as) traditional democratic rules and norms.

    Our democracy is in trouble.