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Digby's Hullabaloo Posts

Fuck Trump?

Apparently, people believe that Julia Stratton’s come from behind victory for the Illinois Democratic Senate nomination was at least somewhat based on that ad. Dan Pfeiffer asks whether that’s something that should be replicated in order campaigns:

I ask the question — Is Fuck Trump a good message for Democrats?

1. Desperately Seeking Attention

Attention is the mother’s milk of politics in 2026. Every politician needs it and it’s never been harder to get. The old formula for putting your face in front of voters was two-fold. First, get the news media to cover you. This was never easy, but it was possible. You make “news” by announcing a new policy, launching a new effort, or saying something interesting in front of a TV camera. In state and local campaigns, that meant talking to the local press. Unfortunately, the local press is a shell of its former self. There are fewer outlets, and many of the ones that still exist do not have the resources to cover politics the same way.

The second way to get attention was to buy it. Campaigns would spend millions of dollars to run ads during the television programs most watched by their target viewers. While they still spend millions, those ads reach far fewer people in a world where streaming video is the norm and large platforms like Netflix don’t allow political ads.

Stratton ran this ad because she needed attention. She needed something that went viral online, generated conversation, and ensured that people knew who she was and considered voting for her.

Getting attention often means courting controversy — saying and doing edgy things that will get people talking. To get attention, you also need to be willing to piss some people off. The algorithms that distribute political news value engagement. An angry comment is worth as much as a positive one.

Running an ad with a bunch of Illinoisans saying “Fuck Trump” will get people paying attention. Many more people saw the ad on social media or through news coverage than when it ran as a commercial.

Getting attention is important. How you use that attention once you have it is even more important.

2. Why This Ad Worked for Stratton

When the ad was first posted, there was a lot of agitation among Stratton supporters and other Democrats that she had gone too far. People worried the ad seemed too desperate and would elicit backlash.

I was less worried.

“Fuck Trump” is a clever way to capture the rage that Democratic voters have — not just at Trump, but also at Democratic leadership, the media, corporations, and everyone else they believe has failed to respond to the threat he poses.

There was little worry about backlash within the Democratic electorate about being too anti-Trump, even with the profanity. Stratton was running in a Democratic primary in Illinois, a state Kamala Harris won by 11 points in 2024. There is no serious Republican running. So even if the ad was too much for some Independents and disenchanted Republicans, it wouldn’t hurt her in the general election.

The part of the ad that worked for me — and this is the lesson for other Democrats — is that once Stratton had your attention, she used it to tell the viewer about her biography, her policy stances, and that popular Democratic politicians like Governor J.B. Pritzker and Senator Tammy Duckworth were backing her candidacy.

Unlike so much of the viral slop churned out by various political actors these days, Stratton’s ad is attention-getting with a purpose.

3. What About the Profanity?

Just a few years ago, the idea of a politician running an ad with the F word in it would have seemed insane. Politicians never swore in public, and certainly not in ads and videos.

This is one of the many things that have changed since Trump came down the escalator 11 years ago. Our political culture has coarsened, and perhaps more importantly, politicians can now communicate with voters in ways other than broadcast television networks regulated by the FCC and their profanity standards.

Politicians are swearing all the time now. They call “bullshit” and add a “fucking” for emphasis to their tweets and other posts.

Look, I have no problem with profanity. If you listen to Pod Save America, you may think I have a profanity problem, because I swear more than I should (apologies to those who listen to the podcast in the car or at home with their kids around). There are limits — notably, Stratton and Pritzker don’t actually say “Fuck Trump” in the ad (although Duckworth does).

Even so, the bigger issue is that too many politicians see profanity as a proxy for authenticity. Adding the F word to your focus-grouped statement doesn’t change how voters see you. It just makes you look even more like a phony.

4. Can You Be Too Anti-Trump?

There are very few fresh ideas in political ad-making, so it’s likely that a lot of ad makers will see the success of the “Fuck Trump” ad and try to come up with their own off-brand version.

The biggest question raised is whether there is a danger in being too anti-Trump.

In the 2026 Democratic primaries and the 2028 presidential primaries, you can see Democrats being incentivized to follow the same path Stratton did — with or without a primary. Turn the contest into a question of which Democrat is the most anti-Trump. The good news for Democrats in 2026 is that there are no contested primaries in most of the critical Senate races in the red states we need to win a majority. While anti-Trump sentiment crosses party lines these days, there are limits to the efficacy of a “Fuck Trump” message when you need to persuade a significant number of Trump voters to win.

With a midterm electorate in this political environment — and Trump’s poll numbers where they are — I’m not really worried about Democrats being too anti-Trump. This will differ based on the partisanship of the district and state, but I just don’t foresee an anti-anti-Trump backlash.

In 2028, a huge number of Democrats will be competing for attention and grassroots donations. Being vehemently anti-Trump is a great way to acquire both of those precious commodities. Gavin Newsom has used this exact strategy to jump to the top of the hypothetical 2028 polls.

That may be a great way to win the primary, but it may not be the most compelling message in the general election. I don’t say this because there will be some fondness in the electorate for Trump, or nostalgia for the Trump era, as it comes to an end. It’s more that I think voters are going to be bored and tired of Trump. He will be old news. They are going to be desperate to turn the page on the Trump era and will be looking for someone who has a vision for what comes next.

In summary, Fuck Trump is a fine message. There is no need to pearl-clutch about it — but it won’t be sufficient to build the governing majority we need.

There’s no reason you can’t do both. And if one of his henchmen like Vance or Rubio gets the nomination in 28, “fuck Trump and his little dog too” will be perfectly serviceable. The rage will not have abated. But yes, by then people are going to want to hear some good news about the future. But I would caution that part of that really needs to include accountability. If we let this go again it’s inevitable that it’s going to come back in full force whenever the Republicans gain some political power again, something I think is entirely possible if the Democrats fail to deal with what’s happened.

Narcissism On Steroids

Following up on the post below:

Eric Trump:

FIRST LOOK: The Donald J. Trump Presidential Library is officially here. Over the past six months, I have poured my heart and soul into this project with my incredible team at @Trump. This landmark on the water in Miami, Florida will stand as a lasting testament to an amazing man, an amazing developer, and the greatest President our Nation has ever known.

These images have never been seen by the public — until today. Enjoy!

He’s at 33% in the latest poll.

Tantrum In A Bubble

If one didn’t know better one might assume the United States was about to declare war on its (former) allies.

Trump and his minions don’t seem too understand that we don’t live in a bubble and the global economy exists whether they like it or not. Setting aside the immorality of this juvenile commentary, it’s just so short-sighted and foolish. It’s certainly possible that if the Americans pull out the Europeans will step in and make some agreement over the Strait. I’ve read they’re already in place to do so. And if that happens Trump will strut around like he’s Richard the Lionheart saying this was the plan all along. Maybe he’ll even get away with it — the U.S. is now just a big dumb giant asshole and it doesn’t pay for anyone to rub salt in our wounds right now. But the world will know that he blew up a bunch of stuff and killed a bunch of people for absolutely no reason and they won’t forget.

This Bulwark segment with Sue Gordon, former top intelligence chief, is well worth watching if you want an intelligent analysis of what we’re dealing with. Gordon knows her shit and this take doesn’t come from a partisan perspective.

The Megalomaniac In Chief

I know you probably don’t want to hear his voice or look at this face anymore.I know I don’t. But if you can stomach it, watch this manic rant and ask yourself what you would have thought 15 years ago if someone had told you this freak would someday be president:

At least once a day I have to pinch myself to make sure this isn’t just some interminable nightmare. It still can’t really believe we would have done this to ourselves twice.

Deceive, Disrupt, Deny

It’s coming. They are broadcasting that it’s coming.

Three recent studies found that the U.S. is backsliding on its commitment to popular democracy. Ian Bassin, the co-founder and executive director of Protect Democracy, spoke with Dahlia Lithwick on Slate’s Amicus podcast about his group’s new report, Executive Override.

“So let’s understand what’s coming, and what’s already begun,” Bassin argues. “It’s essentially three things: deceive, disrupt, and deny.” Just what we saw Donald Trump do in response to his losing in 2020.

Bassin explains in detail why his “stolen election” election deception wasn’t enough in 2020 to overturn the election in his favor. Including the nation’s system for running elections distributed among over 3,000 counties and roughly 175,000 voting precincts. But Trump will make adjustments in 2026. Much of the prep work Trump did on convincing nearly a third of Americans that elections are rigged was undone when he won the 2024 election. So Trump has had to seize ballots in Georgia and in Arizona. That was just the warmup:

They’re going to get Nicolás Maduro to cop to some plea that Venezuela hacked the election. They’re going to create all these fictional conspiracy theories. They sent voting monitors from the DOJ to New Jersey and California in 2025. Harmeet Dhillon is going to come out with some report that she sees dead people. They’re going to come out with all this manufactured stuff to try to persuade people that something untoward is happening; that Iran is interfering; China’s interfering; the Cookie Monster is stealing ballots, right?

And that’s all to set up the “disrupt.” Once you can convince people that there’s something that really needs fixing here, you can get all these people you don’t necessarily directly control to try to change the rules and disrupt the system. So right now, the president is putting all this heat on the Senate to pass the SAVE Act. Which would mandate birth certificates and passports in order to register to vote, disenfranchising tens of millions of people, including, especially, married women who have changed their names and may not have gone back and gotten a new birth certificate with their new name on it. But the president hasn’t deceived enough people yet, and so the Senate is basically saying, “Yeah, nah.” So the president has to deceive more people. If he does, you’ll have more disruption. Ultimately, if the disruption doesn’t succeed, and the results are not to the president’s liking, you’ll have the “deny” phase, where they will simply try to deny the results. This is what happened in 2020.

Lithwick concludes:

We’ve seen this before. We saw it in 2020. We saw it in North Carolina in 2024. We have defeated it each time. That’s the fourth D: We’re going to defeat this. We’ve done it before. We’ll do it again.

Committing to voting will not be enough. Bassin’s group suggests a menu of actions those in different positions can take to prepare in advance.

But as we saw in 2024 in the North Carolina State Supreme Court race between Allison Riggs and Jefferson Griffin, preparing to mobilize against the post-election denial efforts will be vital. We know what’s coming. Engage now with your local election board and county Democratic Party.

Scenes From The Unmaking Of America

He’s coming for you and yours

Trump balloon shits fire onto U.S. Constitution. https://x.com/MarcoFoster_/status/2037927856773255522?s=20

The No Kings protests over the weekend were the largest yet. Over 8 million people protested. The question is will the backlash to Trump 2.0 be effective enough soon enough, assuming at all.

Without quoting Martin Niemöller yet again, here are just a few items by which Trump is coming our freedoms and demolishing the country almost as quickly as the East Wing.

Robert Kagan warns in The Atlantic that the U.S. is now a rogue superpower. Much of the world saw it not as a threat to contain, but “a partner to be enlisted.” Now it has might without right:

Nations that once bandwagoned with the United States will now remain aloof or align against it—not because they want to, but because the United States leaves them no choice, because it will neither protect them nor refrain from exploiting them. Welcome to the era of the rogue American superpower. It will be lonely and dangerous.

About Trump-Miller’s effort to end birthright citizenship, the Washington Post considers the potential casualties, including a 5-month-old born here to non-citizens. While the rest of us worry about voter disenfranchisement, her parents worry about being deported and their American-born child becoming stateless:

Supporters of birthright citizenship say its demise would tear at the economic and social fabric of the country and undermine an ideal that has made the United States a beacon for persecuted and impoverished migrants for generations.

Roughly 250,000 children would be born without citizenship in the United States each year if Trump’s order is upheld, or about 5 million by 2045, according to a friend of the court brief in the case filed by a group of 141 professors.

They argue that ending birthright citizenship would create a swath of society with limited access to education, health care and social safety net programs and would damage the American economy.

Politico considers the plight of Francesca Albanese, targeted with sanctions by the Trump administration for speaking out against U.S. policy on Gaza and against tech giants profiting from “the starvation and killing of the Palestinians of Gaza.”

The Atlantic examines the legal jeopardy of Rep. LaMonica McIver of New Jersey, charged with “assaulting, resisting, or impeding” federal officials last May. She’s asked a judge to dismiss the charges citing the Constitution’s speech-or-debate clause as her shield.

But this administration respects no constitutional rights that get in its way. Cross them, or bear the wrong genes, and you are a target. If not now, eventually, as Niemöller warned.

Digby cited Yonatan Touval’s column on how Trump misjudged the Iranian response to his war. Not comprehending other people, and lacking any historical understanding, Trump fantasized that military power was enough to make Iran buckle. Touval writes:

Tolstoy traced the same pattern from the other side. In “War and Peace,” he depicted Napoleon — nourished on Plutarch’s “Lives” and its portraits of greatness — who marched through Borodino to Moscow and still could not fathom a people who would let their city burn rather than submit. His error was not tactical. It was imaginative: He could not credit the Russians with a logic that was not his own. That is the mistake the architects of this campaign are repeating. A leadership that has spent decades framing resistance to American and Israeli power as a religious obligation will experience military pressure not as a reason to capitulate but more probably as a reason to endure.

But by that same token, many of us, failed to comprehend the mind of men like Trump and MAGAs who swear allegiance to him with a religious fervor. They too are willing to let their country burn rather than share power with people they consider inferiors, as disloyal to Dear Leader, and as usurpers of white dominance which they’ve considered for centuries their birthright.

For now, the fire is metaphorical. The danger is real.

More On Trump’s Birth-fit

See what I did there?

SprAyTAN was ranting ignorantly at the Supreme Court over birthright citizenship while I was pulling together my second post earlier. When Donald Trump signed his executive order last year puporting to rewrite the 14th Amendment’s birthright citizenship clause, he condemned courts’ traditional interpretation, saying, “We are the only country in the world that does this with the birthright, as you know, and it’s just absolutely ridiculous.”

That “as you know” is one of Trump’s flourishes used to reinforce lies he tells. It’s another version of “a lot of people are saying.”

Um, no. In fact, most Western Hemisphere countries have birthright citizenship. Including Canada, and then some.

In fact, on December 15 the Canadian government by law extended citizenship by inheritance to anyone who can document being a direct descendent of a Canadian citizen:

Amid rising tensions in the United States, many Americans are looking to Canada — and their roots — for a possible way out.

Lynn Rutman, a Cape Cod, Mass., resident with family ties to Quebec and Nova Scotia dating back centuries, said she’s worried about the political situation in her country, citing recent events surrounding controversial immigration enforcement policies and long-standing ideological divides.

“It’s not just me, many of us are concerned,” she said.

She’s now one of thousands who have begun the process of applying for proof of Canadian citizenship following recent changes to Canada’s citizenship rules.

Prior to Bill C-3, An Act to Amend the Citizenship Act (2025), citizenship by descent for those born abroad was limited to the first generation.

But now, Canadian citizenship is being retroactively granted to people born before the new law came into effect on Dec. 15, 2025, who would have been citizens if not for the first-generation limit. Different criteria, however, apply to those born on or after that date.

You don’t have to apply for Canadian citzenship. If you have the genealogy, Canada retroactively recognizes you as a Canadian. You’re just not functionally one until you formally document it for the government. Satisfy that and they send you a certificate of citizenship with which you can obtain a passport.

Guess what I’m doing in my spare time? No plans for going anywhere. Too much Irish on both sides. (Is this a private fight?) But if Canada’s offering me a back door….

The Guns Of March

I’m sure most of you have read the famous popular historian Barbara Tuchman’s book about the beginning of WWI called “The Guns Of August.” (I’ve always thought of it as the “when boys wanna use their toys” thesis — a technological revolution sparks the desire to use new weaponry.) This piece in the NY Times today (gift link) by foreign policy analyst Yonatan Touval offers a different perspective and it’s so right on:

Four weeks into the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran, one conclusion is already difficult to avoid. Our leaders preside over an extraordinary machinery of destruction, but they remain strikingly obtuse about human beings — about their pride, shame, convictions and historical memory.

The war’s architects appear to have assumed that killing a nation’s leaders, dominating airspace and destroying infrastructure would produce regime collapse in Tehran and strategic clarity in Washington and Jerusalem. Instead, Iran, though badly weakened, has managed to disrupt shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, drastically widen the war’s economic radius and force Washington into the old, unglamorous business of soliciting allied help after entering a war confident that it would be swift and decisive.

It is tempting to describe this as a failure of intelligence. Technically, it is not. The spycraft kind of intelligence behind the war planning and execution is extensive. Recent reporting suggests that Israeli intelligence spent years penetrating Tehran’s traffic cameras and communications networks and built what one unnamed Israeli source described to CNN as an A.I.-powered “target-production machine” capable of turning enormous volumes of visual, human and signals intelligence into precise strike coordinates. That is an extraordinary achievement of surveillance and targeting.

Yet never has so much been seen, so precisely, by so many people who understand so little of what they are seeing. A system can tell you where a man is. It cannot tell you what his death will mean for a nation. Such systems are trained on behavior, not on meaning — they can track what an adversary does but not what he fears, honors, remembers or would die for.

This is the recurring illusion of overequipped leaders: Because they can map the battle space, they think they understand the war. But war is never merely a technical contest. It is shaped by grievance, sacred narrative, the memory of past humiliations and the desire for revenge. Those are not atmospheric complications added to an otherwise technical enterprise. They are what the war is about.

So the familiar errors appear. The war planners imagine that a regime can be decapitated into collapse, whereas external attack often does the opposite — binding a battered state more tightly to a society newly united by injury, humiliation and rage. They imagine that destroying conventional assets would settle the matter, as if legitimacy, wounded sovereignty and collective anger were secondary rather than the war’s actual terrain. Planners who took their adversary’s self-understanding seriously — rather than discounting it as propaganda — might have anticipated that an attack would not weaken the regime’s narrative but instead fulfill it. They might also have foreseen the paradox that systematic decapitation does not produce negotiators. It removes them.

Read the whole thing. It’s a fundamental problem with our leadership and most of the strongman dictator types.

Trump thinks everything is about coercive “deals” and money and he’s wrong. The tech bros are all in on their new technology and they’re wrong. And the warmongers like Pete Hegseth, as usual, think it’s about military “toughness” and superior hardware and they’re wrong too. (Trump buys into that as well, as we’ve seen with his insistence that Ukraine could not possibly resist Russia and now, probably, Iran.) None of these people have any idea how actual humans think because they’re so solipsistic that they think everyone is just like them. And even then, they don’t actually know themselves so that’s wrong too.

We see this phenomenon all over our politics and the culture at large. Trump didn’t anticipate that Americans would actually resist his authoritarianism because he promised to bring the bread and circuses. He’s certainly brought the circus but it isn’t a fun one, at least for most people. And the bread is stale and expensive. He just assumed he could use lies, hype and bribes to make yet another of his “deals” with the American people and everyone would end up loving him. It turns out that many people actually care about something more than money and being entertained by hurting vulnerable people. Go figure.

These people do not understand how other people feel and think because they have no empathy. Our leading tech lord Elon Musk even likes to say “the fundamental weakness of Western civilization is empathy” so they are actually proud of it. They think it’s a brilliant insight. But he’s wrong too. It’s vitally important to have empathy if you need to understand your adversaries — and your friends.

This is a big reason why they are so incompetent at governance. They just don’t understand what motivates people besides fear and they assume that always leads to capitulation. They couldn’t be more wrong.

As Touval writes:

What this war exposes, then, is a failure not only of strategy but of literacy. Literature and history, at their most serious, train precisely the faculties these leaders lack: the capacity to grant that other minds are not transparent to us, and are governed by purposes not our own. A mind tutored by history and literature knows that actors in the grip of a sacred cause tend to mean what they say — and that bombing a founding myth is more likely to consecrate it than to dissolve it.

This is what happens when you elect rich imbeciles who have no empathy and no intellect. You get barbarians.

They Own This

Jake Sherman at Punchbowl:

AM: REPUBLICANS DHS MESS Let’s be abundantly clear — this record-breaking, 44-day DHS funding impasse has turned into a political disaster for Republicans.

At one point, Republicans seemed to be breaking through with their message that Democrats instigated the DHS fight over undocumented immigrants. But now, House and Senate Republicans are publicly warring with each other over who’s at fault for last week’s debacle. The GOP-run Congress has left town until mid-April, while President Donald Trump was forced to issue an executive order to pay TSA employees. …

This episode illustrates how adrift the GOP-run Congress is when Trump remains on the sidelines. Trump was completely silent about the Senate’s proposal, although his staff was telling lawmakers he approved. When it became clear that the House would reject it, Trump sided with them. …

But now the House Republican Conference has ownership of the impasse. Johnson’s rejection of Thune’s approach ensures that the next two weeks will be all about how GOP infighting is prolonging the shutdown.

By the way:

A new national University of Massachusetts Amherst Poll finds President Donald Trump’s approval rating has fallen to 33%, the lowest rating of his second term in office. The poll of 1,000 respondents, conducted March 20-25, finds Trump’s approval down five points from July 2025 and 11 points lower than last April.

“In the midst of skyrocketing prices, significant declines in the stock market, an unpopular war in the Middle East, a government shutdown that has led to lines at airports and nationwide protests against his presidency, it is no shock that President Donald Trump’s approval ratings have taken a hit in our latest polling,” Tatishe Nteta, provost professor of political science at UMass Amherst and director of the poll, says. “What is surprising, and of likely grave concern to the White House, are the dips in support from the very groups that helped Trump take back the presidency in 2024. Among men, working class Americans and African Americans, Trump’s approval ratings have dropped by close to 20 points since April 2025. Similar drops in support are also seen among moderates (down 18 points) and independents (down 13 points), key constituencies in Trump’s victory and in the upcoming midterm election.”

“Nearly two-thirds (63%) of Americans say the president is handling Iran poorly, including 52% who say ‘not well at all.’ This appears to create a weak foundation for Trump to attempt to escalate the war,” La Raja says. “These views are sharply polarized, though, with 71% of Republicans saying Trump is handling Iran well, compared to only 1% of Democrats. Nearly 9 in 10 (89%) strong MAGA supporters say he is handling Iran well, and 82% say that attacking Iran is putting America first, but that support drops sharply among other Trump voters, revealing a clear divide within the Republican coalition. Strong MAGA voters appear to rally behind the president, while more conditional supporters are far more skeptical, suggesting potential cracks beneath the surface.”

How about this?

“Trump and his supporters may have hoped that public concerns about Trump’s relationship with disgraced sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein would fade with the Justice Department’s release of millions of pages of documents relating to Epstein, but this hope has gone unfulfilled,” Rhodes says. “Two-thirds of Americans say that Trump is not handling the release of information concerning Epstein well, with 54% saying he is not handling it well at all. Negative perceptions of Trump’s handling of the Epstein affair are widespread – large majorities of virtually every demographic group say Trump is not handling the issue well, and only bare majorities of Republicans and conservatives say he’s handling the release of information about Epstein well. Clearly, this issue is not going away anytime soon.”

Aand:

The Legacy Of A Madman

It’s no secret that President Trump is planning to blanket the nation’s capital with monuments to himself designed to last long after he shuffles off this mortal coil. He’s already added his name to the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, even though he isn’t dead, and to the U.S. Institute of Peace, even though he’s fired everyone who worked there, and is waging war and overthrowing governments. Trump has redecorated much of the White House, and his eyes are now reportedly set on turning the Treaty Room into a guest bedroom with an en suite bathroom. He tore down the East Wing to make room for a massive ballroom, and he has submitted plans to build a giant Triumphal Arch

All of these will be remembered as Donald Trump’s tributes to himself. But his latest scheme is even more brazen: He will soon appear on American currency. The U.S. Mint will distribute large commemorative $1 gold coins bearing Trump’s face, ostensibly to celebrate the nation’s 250th birthday, and there’s talk of putting him on the dime as well. On Thursday it was reported that his signature will appear on all paper currency going forward. 

That’s right. His Richter scale scribble will soon be in every Americans’ wallet to remind us of this trauma for decades to come. 

None of this is normal. To the extent the president has bothered to get approval for these projects, hand-picked sycophants on the various appointed boards eagerly signed off without question, and in other cases, he simply ordered it to be done. He had no right to unilaterally tear down part of the White House. As an historic building that belongs to the American people, there are processes that he should have followed. Now there’s nothing to be done about it, including the fact that he plans to put a humongous monstrosity in its place — a large-scale ballroom that will dwarf the People’s House. 

I wrote about the gold coin a few months back, pointing out there’s a special meaning when leaders put themselves on money. It’s been the case, going back to the ancients, that monarchs and despots use this method to ensure their subjects understand they hold complete power and control the money supply. For this very reason, America has had a long-held norm of not featuring living presidents on the currency — until now. Our founders didn’t believe that power should rest with one person, and that however much was conferred on the president, it was temporary. 

Under Trump, we have entered a new era in which the president of the United States can do virtually anything he chooses. Republicans in Congress enable his every wish, and they have demonstrated no desire to preserve the legislative branch’s own prerogatives. Constitutional restraints on presidential power are being tested in the courts, which have temporarily stopped some of Trump’s initiatives, but the Supreme Court has pretty much let him have his way, as pending cases glacially make their way to them for final disposition. When the justices did rule against one of his claims to unilateral power, finding he could not use emergency powers to single-handedly impose tariffs on other countries, his response was to slam his own appointees who voted in the majority. (Just last week, Trump said that those justices, Neil Gorsuch and Amy Coney Barrett, “sicken” him.)

The president’s megalomania is becoming more pronounced by the day. In contrast to his first term, when he had to think about being re-elected and lacked a firm grasp on how to successfully wield political power, Trump the tyrant is now in full effect.

The president’s megalomania is becoming more pronounced by the day. In contrast to his first term, when he had to think about being re-elected and lacked a firm grasp on how to successfully wield political power, Trump the tyrant is now in full effect. In the domestic arena, he has strong-armed institutions, from law firms to universities, bending them to his will, and he has personally directed what he views as his personal police force, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, as well as the military, to the streets of American cities to intimidate and brutalize the population. 

Since the first of the year, Trump’s sense of omnipotence has manifested violently in foreign policy. He initiated the military operation to abduct the president of Venezuela, the success of which fed his already-massive ego to such an extent that he believes he is invincible. In a January interview with four New York Times reporters, the president was asked if there were any limits on his global powers. “Yeah, there is one thing,” he replied. “My own morality. My own mind. It’s the only thing that can stop me… I don’t need international law.” 

He meant that. On the heels of his Venezuelan triumph, Trump was ready to go to war with Iran, which he believed would be a similar cakewalk. But that conflict, which he launched on Feb. 28 in partnership with Israel, is proving difficult. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told the New York Times on Saturday that Trump is committed to victory, and her words were revealing about what is driving him. “He understands that these sorts of things throughout history are ultimately judged by the outcome,” she said, “and the president knows that at the end of this, when we are able to declare that the Iranian terrorist regime no longer poses a threat to the United States militarily, that is going to be a legacy-making, history-marking moment.”

Trump is likely to escalate the war to achieve this goal. According to experts who study the psychological profiles of strongmen dictators, escalation in such situations is the norm. Historian Ruth Ben-Ghiat, author of “Strongmen: How They Rise, Why They Succeed, How They Fall,” says that failure leads to what she calls “autocratic backfire,” a condition that “occurs when narcissistic leaders have insulated themselves from criticism by surrounding themselves with sycophants and loyalists. No one will tell them the truth, and religious collaborators tell them they are in office by divine will, and so they also end up believing their own propaganda about their invincibility, genius instincts, and infallibility.” 

Autocratic backfire is exactly what we are dealing with today. We don’t know how this will fully manifest, but the president’s apparent physical and mental deterioration, and the consequences of that, could easily be catastrophic. 

Trump is playing for history now. He will turn 80 in June, and lately he has been admitting that he knows he can’t run for president again. Despite all evidence to the contrary, he claims he is popular — but it doesn’t seem he really cares all that much about public opinion, even from his most ardent MAGA followers. The wider movement, from its leaders in Congress to media figures to rank-and-file voters, are sharply divided over the war in Iran. He has largely thumbed his nose at them over the Epstein files. Now he spends a lot less time on the road, and he doesn’t appear to get the same lift from his fans that he used to. 

What’s really exciting him now is something familiar: having his name on buildings and monuments, and his face and signature on money. It’s a return to form for the real estate mogul who slapped his name on everything from hotels to neckties to steaks; in his beginning is his end, you might say, with apologies to T.S. Eliot.

The idea has been planted in Trump’s head that, long after he’s gone, he will be remembered as one of the world’s greatest leaders. So everything he is doing now is about legacy, and with a malignant narcissist who knows that he may not be long for this earth, the danger that comes with those realizations is acute.

The president often says he can do anything and he’s always been right about everything. This means he believes he can literally do no wrong, and therefore, he has no obligation to consider anything before he makes a decision. He said it out loud on Thursday in reference to a peace agreement with Iran: “I’m the opposite of desperate. I don’t care.” 

Trump doesn’t care because he’s convinced he will be remembered as a monumental figure who changed the world. He may be right about that — but it’s unlikely he’ll be inducted in the pantheon of those who are seen as great successes. Great failures can change the world as well, and not in a good way. Some of those are even remembered as the leaders who brought down great empires with their own hubris and egotism.

But Trump will no doubt go to his grave believing that he’ll be seen as the greatest president in American history. After all, would his signature be on the money if he weren’t?

Salon