By Jonathan Rauch
Sunday, January 25, 2026
Until recently, I resisted using the F-word to describe
President Trump. For one thing, there were too many elements of classical
fascism that didn’t seem to fit. For another, the term has been overused to the
point of meaninglessness, especially by left-leaning types who call you a
fascist if you oppose abortion or affirmative action. For yet another, the term
is hazily defined, even by its adherents. From the beginning, fascism has been
an incoherent doctrine, and even today scholars can’t agree on its definition.
Italy’s original version differed from Germany’s, which differed from Spain’s,
which differed from Japan’s.
I accepted President Biden’s characterization of the MAGA
movement as “semi-fascist”
because some parallels were glaringly apparent. Trump was definitely an
authoritarian, and unquestionably a patrimonialist.
Beyond that, though, the best description seemed to be a psychological one propounded
by John Bolton, Trump’s first-term national security adviser: “He listens
to Putin, he listens to Xi, he listens to how they talk about governing
unburdened by uncooperative legislatures, unconcerned with what the judiciary
may do, and he thinks to himself, Why can’t I do that? This doesn’t
amount to being a fascist, in my view, [or] having a theory of how you want to
govern. It’s just Why can’t I have the same fun they have?”
Writing a year
ago, I argued that Trump’s governing regime is a version of patrimonialism,
in which the state is treated as the personal property and family business of
the leader. That is still true. But, as I also noted then, patrimonialism is a style
of governing, not a formal ideology or system. It can be layered atop all kinds
of organizational structures, including not just national governments but also
urban political machines such as Tammany Hall, criminal gangs such as the
Mafia, and even religious cults. Because its only firm principle is personal
loyalty to the boss, it has no specific agenda. Fascism, in contrast, is
ideological, aggressive, and, at least in its early stages, revolutionary. It
seeks to dominate politics, to crush resistance, and to rewrite the social
contract.
Over Trump’s past year, what originally looked like an
effort to make the government his personal plaything has drifted distinctly
toward doctrinal and operational fascism. Trump’s appetite for lebensraum, his
claim of unlimited power, his support for the global far right, his
politicization of the justice system, his deployment of performative brutality,
his ostentatious violation of rights, his creation of a national paramilitary
police—all of those developments bespeak something more purposeful and sinister
than run-of-the-mill greed or gangsterism.
***
When the facts change, I change my mind. Recent events
have brought Trump’s governing style into sharper focus. Fascist best
describes it, and reluctance to use the term has now become perverse. That is
not because of any one or two things he and his administration have done but
because of the totality. Fascism is not a territory with clearly marked
boundaries but a constellation of characteristics. When you view the stars
together, the constellation plainly appears.
Demolition of norms. From the beginning of his
first presidential run in 2015, Trump deliberately crashed through every
boundary of civility; he mocked
Senator John McCain’s war heroism, mocked
fellow candidate Carly Fiorina’s face, seemingly mocked
the Fox News host Megyn Kelly’s menstruation, slurred immigrants,
and much more. Today he still does it, recently making an obscene gesture to a
factory worker and calling a journalist “piggy.” This is a
feature of the fascist governing style, not a bug. Fascists know that what the
American Founders called the “republican virtues” impede their political
agenda, and so they gleefully trash liberal pieties such as reason and
reasonableness, civility and civic spirit, toleration and forbearance. By
mocking decency and saying the unsayable, they open the way for what William
Galston has
called the “dark passions” of fear, resentment, and especially
domination—the kind of politics that shifts the public discourse to ground on
which liberals cannot compete.
Glorification of violence. Every state uses
violence to enforce its laws, but liberal states use it reluctantly, whereas
fascism embraces
and flaunts it. Trump thus praises a violent mob;
endorses
torture; muses
fondly about punching, body-slamming, and shooting protesters and journalists;
and reportedly suggests shooting protesters
and migrants.
His recruitment
ads for ICE glamorize military-style raids of homes and neighborhoods; his
propaganda takes
childish delight in the killing of civilians; and we have all seen videos
of agents dragging people out of
cars and homes—partly
because the government films
them. Like the demolition of civic decency, the valorization of violence is
not incidental to fascism; it is part and parcel.
Might is right. Also characteristic of fascism is
what George Orwell called “bully-worship”:
the principle that, as Thucydides famously put
it, “the strong do what they can and the weak suffer what they must.” This
view came across in Trump’s notorious Oval Office meeting with
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, in which Trump showed open contempt for
what he regarded as Ukraine’s weakness; it came across explicitly, and
chillingly, when Stephen Miller, the president’s most powerful aide, told
CNN’s Jack Tapper: “We live in a world, in the real world, that is governed
by strength, that is governed by force, that is governed by power. These are
the iron laws of the world that have existed since the beginning of time.”
Those words, though alien to the traditions of American and Christian morality,
could have come from the lips of any fascist dictator.
Politicized law enforcement. Liberals follow the
law whether they like it or not; fascists, only when they like it. Nazism
featured a “dual
state,” where, at any moment, the protections of ordinary law could cease
to apply. Trump makes no secret of despising due process of law; he has
demanded countless times that his opponents be jailed (“Lock her up!”
chants, with his
endorsement, were a prominent feature of his 2016 campaign), and he has
suggested the Constitution’s “termination”
and said “I
don’t know” when asked if he is required to uphold it. His single most
dangerous second-term innovation is the repurposing of federal law enforcement
to persecute his enemies (and shield his
friends). No prior president has produced anything like Trump’s direct
and public order for the Justice Department to investigate two former
officials, or like his blatantly
retaliatory prosecutions of James Comey and Letitia James. “At least 470
people, organizations and institutions have been targeted for retribution since
Trump took office—an average of more than one a day,” Reuters
reported in November (and today one can add others to the list, beginning
with Federal Reserve Chair Jerome
Powell). Had Trump done nothing else, his demolition of
independent and apolitical law enforcement would still have moved the U.S.
government closer than ever before to a fascistic model.
Dehumanization. Fascism draws its legitimacy from
its claims of defending the people from enemies who are animals, criminals,
brutes. Trump characterizes (for instance) political opponents as “vermin”
and immigrants as “garbage”
who are “poisoning
the blood of our country” (language straight out of the Third Reich). Vice
President Vance, as a senator, endorsed a book called Unhumans
(a title that refers to the left). And who can forget his false claim that
Haitians abduct and eat pet cats and dogs?
Police-state tactics. Trump has turned ICE into a
sprawling paramilitary that roves the country at will, searches and detains
noncitizens and citizens
without warrants, uses force ostentatiously, operates behind masks, receives skimpy
training, lies
about its activities, and has been told that it enjoys “absolute
immunity.” He more than doubled
the agency’s size in 2025, and its budget is now larger than those of all
other federal law-enforcement agencies combined,
and larger than the entire military budgets of all but 15 countries.
“This is going to affect every community, every city,” the Cato Institute
scholar David Bier
recently observed. “Really almost everyone in our country is going to come
in contact with this, one way or the other.” In Minneapolis and elsewhere, the
agency has behaved provocatively, sometimes brutally,
and arguably illegally—behaviors
that Trump and his staff have encouraged, shielded, and sent
camera crews to publicize, perhaps in the hope of eliciting violent
resistance that would justify further crackdowns, a standard fascist stratagem.
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem’s recent appearance with a sign
reading One of ours, all of yours seemed to nod toward another fascist standby,
collective punishment—as did the administration’s decision to flood Minneapolis
with thousands of officers after residents there began protesting federal
tactics, a prioritization that was explicitly
retributive.
Undermining elections. Trump’s recent musing that
there should be no 2026 election may or may not have been jocular
(as the White House has maintained), but he and his MAGA supporters believe
they never lose an election, period. They went to great lengths to overturn the
2020 election, as the prosecutor Jack Smith’s indictment of
Trump and subsequent report
detail ad nauseam. Rigging, stealing, or outright canceling elections is, of
course, job one for fascists. Although Trump is term-limited, we must not
expect that he and his MAGA loyalists will voluntarily turn over the White
House to a Democrat in 2029, regardless of what the voters say—and the second
insurrection will be far better organized than the first.
What’s private is public. Classical fascism
rejects the fundamental liberal distinction between the government and the
private sector, per Mussolini’s dictum:
“No individuals or groups outside the State.” Among Trump’s most audacious (if
only intermittently successful) initiatives are his efforts to commandeer
private entities, including law
firms, universities,
and corporations.
One of his first acts as president last year was to brazenly defy a newly
enacted law by taking the ownership of TikTok into his
own hands. Bolton understood this mentality when he said, “He can’t tell
the difference between his own personal interest and the national interest, if
he even understands what the national interest is.”
Attacks on news media. Shortly after taking office
in 2017, Trump denounced the news media as “the
enemy of the American people,” a phrase familiar from dictatorships abroad.
His hostility never
relented, but in his second term, it has reached new heights. Trump has
threatened broadcast
licenses, abused his regulatory
authority, manipulated ownership
deals, filed exorbitant
lawsuits, played favorites with journalistic
access, searched a reporter’s
home, and vilified news
outlets and journalists. Although Trump cannot dominate news media in the
United States in the way that Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has done in Hungary, he is running the
Orbán playbook. No other president, not even Richard Nixon (no friend of the
media), has used such blatantly illiberal tactics against the press.
Territorial and military aggression. One reason I
held out against identifying Trumpism with fascism in his first term was
Trump’s apparent lack of interest in aggression against other states; if
anything, he had seemed shy about using force abroad. Well, that was then. In
his second term, he has used military force promiscuously.
Of course, many presidents have deployed force, but Trump’s explicitly
predatory use of it to grab
Venezuela’s oil and his gangster-style threat to take Greenland from
Denmark “the
easy way” or “the hard way” were 1930s-style authoritarian moves. The same
goes for his contempt for international law, binding alliances, and
transnational organizations such as the European Union—all of which impede the
state’s unconstrained exercise of its will, a central fascist tenet. (Mussolini:
“Equally foreign to the spirit of Fascism … are all internationalistic or
League superstructures which, as history shows, crumble to the ground whenever
the heart of nations is deeply stirred by sentimental, idealistic or practical
considerations.”)
Transnational reach. Like authoritarians
generally, fascists love company; the world is safer for them if there are
more of them. In his second term, Trump has broken with long-standing U.S.
policy by dialing
back support for human rights while praising and supporting authoritarian
populists and illiberal nationalists in Serbia,
Poland,
Hungary,
Germany,
Turkey,
El
Salvador, and Slovakia,
among other places—and by being weirdly deferential to
the strongman Russian President Vladimir Putin. Even more striking is his de
facto alignment against America’s liberal allies and their parties in Europe,
which he holds in contempt.
Blood-and-soil nationalism. A fascist trademark is
its insistence that the country is not just a collection of individuals but a
people, a Volk: a mystically defined and ethnically pure group bound
together by shared blood, culture, and destiny. In keeping with that idea,
Trump has repudiated
birthright citizenship, and Vance has called
to “redefine the meaning of American citizenship in the 21st century” so
that priority goes to Americans with longer historical ties: “the people whose
ancestors fought in the Civil War,” as he put it, or people whom others on the
MAGA right call “heritage
Americans.” In other words, some Americans are more volkish than others.
White and Christian nationalism. While Vance,
Trump, and MAGA do not propound an explicit ideology of racial hierarchy, they
make no secret of pining for a whiter, more Christian America. Trump has found
many ways to communicate this: for example, by making clear his disdain for “shithole”
countries and his preference for white Christian immigrants; by pointedly
accepting white South Africans as political refugees
(while closing the door to most other asylum seekers); by renaming
military bases to share the names of Confederate generals (after Congress
ordered their names removed); by saying that civil-rights laws led to whites’
being “very badly treated.” In his National Security Strategy, he castigates
Europe for allowing immigration to undermine “civilizational self-confidence”
and proclaims, “We want Europe to remain European,” a rallying cry of white
Christian nationalists across the continent. Taking his cue, the Department of
Homeland Security has propagated unashamedly white-nationalist
themes, and national parks
and museums
have scrubbed their exhibits of references to slavery.
Mobs and street thugs. The use of militias and
mobs to harass, rough up, and otherwise intimidate opponents is a standard
fascist stratagem (the textbook example being Hitler’s Kristallnacht pogrom
in 1938). As few will need reminding, the Trump-MAGA parallel is the mob and
militia violence against the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021. Trump knowingly
laid groundwork for this operation, calling on militia forces to “stand
back and stand by” in September 2020 and later dog-whistling “Be
there, will be wild!” to his supporters. His pardon of all of the Capitol
attackers—more
than 1,500, including the most violent—only proved what we knew, which is
that they had his blessing. While Trump has found state violence adequate to
his purposes so far in his second term, street violence is self-evidently in
his repertoire.
Leader aggrandizement. Since 2016, when he
declared that “I
alone can fix it” and bragged that his supporters would remain loyal if he
shot someone on
Fifth Avenue, Trump has cultivated a personality cult. Although some of his
efforts at self-aggrandizement can seem comical (the gilding of the Oval
Office, the renaming of the Kennedy Center, the proposed triumphal arch), he
understands the centrality of leader worship in a fascist-style regime. In
sharp contradistinction to the American presidential tradition since George
Washington, he makes no pretense of serving the people or the Constitution. His
mindset, his symbolism, and his rhetoric all underscore the point he made to The
New York Times this
month: his own mind and morality are the only limits on his global power.
This is Fascism 101.
Alternative facts. As Orwell,
Hannah
Arendt, and practically every other scholar of authoritarianism have
emphasized, creating a reality-distortion field is the first thing a fascistic
government will do, the better to drive its own twisted narrative, confuse the
citizenry, demoralize political opponents, and justify every manner of
corruption and abuse. While other presidents (including some good
ones) have lied, none have come close to Trump’s deployment of
Russian-style mass disinformation, as I detail in my book The
Constitution of Knowledge. From the start of his first term, Trump has
made “alternative
facts” a hallmark of his governing style, issuing lies, exaggerations, and
half-truths at a rate of 20
a day. Predictably, his second term has brought more
of the same.
Following his lead, a MAGA-fied postmodern
right gleefully trashes objectivity as elitism and truth as a mask for
power.
Politics as war. A distinctive mark of fascism is
its conception of politics, best captured by Carl Schmitt, an
early-20th-century German political theorist whose doctrines legitimized
Nazism. Schmitt rejected the Madisonian view of politics as a social
negotiation in which different factions, interests, and ideology come to
agreement, the core
idea of our Constitution. Rather, he saw politics as a state of war between
enemies, neither of which can understand the other and both of which feel
existentially threatened—and only one of which can win. The aim of Schmittian
politics is not to share the country but to dominate or destroy the other side.
This conception has been evident in MAGA politics since Michael Anton (now a
Trump-administration official) published his famous
article arguing that the 2016 election was a life-and-death battle to save
the country from the left (a “Flight 93” election: “charge the cockpit or you
die”). In the speech
given by Stephen Miller at Charlie Kirk’s memorial service, MAGA’s embrace of
Schmittian totalism found its apotheosis: “We are the storm. And our enemies
cannot comprehend our strength, our determination, our resolve, our passion …
You are nothing. You are wickedness.”
Governing as revolution. Although born in
revolution, the American liberal tradition, especially its conservative branch,
prizes continuity, stability, and incremental change guided by reason. Fascism,
by contrast, “is not reactionary but revolutionary,” as Mussolini insisted.
It seeks to uproot and replace the old order and embraces bold, exhilarating
action unshackled to rational deliberation. MAGA embraces its own revolutionary
ethos, what Russell Vought, the administration’s Office of Management and
Budget director and probably its most formidable intellect, has called “radical
constitutionalism,” a doctrine that would vitiate
many checks on presidential power. In pursuit of this vision, Vought told
Tucker Carlson in a November
2024 interview, “The president has to move executively as fast and as
aggressively as possible, with a radical constitutional perspective, to be able
to dismantle that [federal] bureaucracy and their power centers” because “the
bureaucracies hate the American people.” He predicted, “If you have a radical
constitutionalism, it’s going to be destabilizing … But it’s also
exhilarating.” He said
he would put federal agencies “in trauma,” an idea echoed by Christopher Rufo,
an architect of Trump’s attack on universities, which Rufo described as a
“counterrevolution blueprint” to put universities “in an existential terror.”
As Trump shuttered
a congressionally mandated agency, renamed
an international body of water, arrested
an op-ed writer, deported
immigrants to a foreign gulag, terrorized
American cities, threatened
an ally, and more, he showed how it looks when a radicalized state abandons
rational deliberation and goes to war against itself.
***
One can object that there are elements of classical
European fascism that are not found in Trumpism (mass rallies and public
rituals, for example)—or that there are additional elements of Trumpism that
belong on the list (MAGA’s hypermasculinity,
misogyny,
and co-option
of Christianity all resemble fascist patterns). The exercise of comparing
fascism’s various forms is not precise. If historians object that Trump is not
a copy of Mussolini or Hitler or Franco, the reply is yes—but so what? Trump is
building something new on old principles. He is showing us in real time what
21st-century American fascism looks like.
If, however, Trump is a fascist president, that
does not mean that America is a fascist country. The courts, the states,
and the media remain independent of him, and his efforts to browbeat them will
likely fail. He may lose his grip on Congress in November. He has not succeeded
in molding public opinion, except against
himself. He has outrun the mandate of his voters, his coalition is fracturing,
and he has neglected
tools that allow presidents to make enduring change. He and his party may
defy the Constitution, but they cannot rewrite it, thank goodness.
So the United States, once the world’s exemplary liberal
democracy, is now a hybrid state combining a fascist leader and a liberal
Constitution; but no, it has not fallen to fascism. And it will not.
In which case, is there any point in calling Trump a
fascist, even if true? Doesn’t that alienate his voters? Wouldn’t it be better
just to describe his actions without labeling him controversially?
Until recently, I thought so. No longer. The resemblances
are too many and too strong to deny. Americans who support liberal democracy
need to recognize what we’re dealing with in order to cope with it, and to
recognize something, one must name it. Trump has revealed himself, and we must
name what we see.
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