Things are going to have to get much worse before they get better. The perversely good news is, it is highly likely that much worse times are on their way.
As horrified as I was on January 6, 2021, I was also happy about the assault on the Capitol. This might just be bad enough to break the fever, I thought. Trump all but explicitly endorsed the murder of his Vice President. He incited a riot, then sat by for three hours while his followers assaulted police officers and ransacked the United States Congress. This had to be the death rattle of Trumpism.
Not so.
Within a month, McCarthy went to Mar-a-Lago and kissed the ring and McConnell engineered Trump’s acquittal in the Senate. Four years later, the American people re-elected Trump as President.
For clarity, I’ll describe what I mean by Trumpism and limit myself to one example of each trait. He didn’t invent these traits and habits, but he–like the party he leads–does embody them:
Demagoguery. Poster Child: “They’re eating the dogs.”
Gaslighting. Poster Child: Calling legitimate prosecutions “weaponization” of justice while using DOJ to go after the people he has a grudge against–James Comey, Letitia James, Mark Kelly, Jerome Powell.
Contempt for the rule of law. Poster Child: Illegally firing inspectors general.
Lies, lies, lies. Poster Child: Calling the Mueller report a “complete and total exoneration.”
Celebration of brutality. Poster Child: Sending detainees to CECOT and praising it as “great” and a “very strong” facility.
Contempt for human rights. Poster Child: Utter unconcern at the murder and dismembering of journalist Jamal Khashoggi.
Favoring dominance over cooperation. Poster Child: Abandoning the rules based international order for spheres of influence.
Celebrating dictators. Poster Child: Fawning praise for Putin, Kim, Xi, Duterte, Bukele.
Contempt for science. Calling climate science a “hoax.”
Abjectly unqualified appointees. Poster Child: Pete Hegseth.
Corruption and self-dealing. Poster Child: $TRUMP memecoin.
Contempt for democracy. Poster child: Pushing states to intensify their gerrymandering.
I could go on, but none of this is news. Plus, it’s too hard to limit myself to one example in each of these categories. The short version: Trumpism is the antithesis of what we have held out as the American ideal for at least the last 75 years–it is the abandonment of democracy and the rule of law in favor of a mercurial brand of authoritarianism.
Our problem is that all these things were widely known in November, 2024, and easily knowable by anybody with a whiff of interest in our world and access to a phone, TV, or computer. But a plurality of our voters did not find these traits disqualifying. They were concerned about the price of eggs, transgender athletes, and/or immigration.
Since taking office again, Trump’s net approval rating per Nate Silver’s average of polls has dropped from +11.7 when he was inaugurated last year to -19.6 today: a drop of 41.3 percentage points. This drop has come as Americans increasingly feel the squeeze of inflation, have recoiled from ICE brutality on the streets, and are deeply divided over the Iran war.
It’s not enough.
Barring a sea change, voters will vote widely for Democrats in the mid-terms. But Republicans may retain control of both chambers of Congress due to the idiosyncrasies of the Senate and steroidal gerrymandering in the House. That may be the best outcome for our country. Here’s why:
The electorate needs to clearly see how Trumpism harms us–that its violations of laws, ideals and norms aren’t bad only in the abstract, but that they concretely hurt regular people. In 2024, voters’ perception of their circumstances in the moment overrode any concern for the rules and norms that define the American ideal. And so, I reason, the electorate will not reject Trumpism until we feel a lot of pain and attribute that pain to Trump and the Republican Party. If the Democrats take one or both chambers of Congress, our pain will be less clearly attributable to Trumpism.
It took Hungary sixteen years to vote Viktor Orbán’s party out of office for a second time. Orbán degraded Hungary’s democracy and rule of law in a manner that the US Republican Party adopted as a model. JD Vance went to Hungary last month to campaign for Orbán’s re-election. But the people had finally had enough.
Eventually we’ll get there, too. When we do, I hope we find a renewed appreciation for democracy, rule of law, truthfulness, cooperation, human rights. If these qualities aren’t important in their own right, perhaps we will rediscover how they contribute to our material well-being.
[By Dan T. I'm also going to post this over on that other site.]




