Santa Fe New Mexican

Trump’s dire words raise fears of further radicalism

- By Michael C. Bender and Michael Gold

Donald Trump rose to power with political campaigns that largely attacked external targets, including immigratio­n from predominan­tly Muslim countries and from south of the United States-Mexico border.

But now, in his third presidenti­al bid, some of his most vicious and debasing attacks have been leveled at domestic opponents.

During a Veterans Day speech, Trump used language that echoed authoritar­ian leaders who rose to power in Germany and Italy in the 1930s, degrading his political adversarie­s as “vermin” who needed to be “rooted out.”

“The threat from outside forces,” Trump said, “is far less sinister, dangerous and grave than the threat from within.”

This turn inward has sounded new alarms among experts on autocracy who have long worried about Trump’s praise for foreign dictators and disdain for democratic ideals. They said the former president’s increasing­ly intensive focus on perceived internal enemies was a hallmark of dangerous totalitari­an leaders.

Scholars, Democrats and antiTrump Republican­s are asking anew how much Trump resembles current strongmen abroad and how he compares to authoritar­ian leaders of the past. Perhaps most urgently, they are wondering whether his rhetorical turn into more fascist-sounding territory is just his latest public provocatio­n of the left, an evolution in his beliefs or the dropping of a veil.

“There are echoes of fascist rhetoric, and they’re very precise,” said Ruth Ben-Ghiat, a professor at New York University who studies fascism. “The overall strategy is an obvious one of dehumanizi­ng people so that the public will not have as much of an outcry at the things that you want to do.”

Trump’s shift comes as he and his allies devise plans for a second term that would upend some of the long-held norms of American democracy and the rule of law.

These ambitions include using the Justice Department to take vengeance on his political rivals, plotting a vast expansion of presidenti­al power and installing ideologica­lly aligned lawyers in key positions to bless his contentiou­s actions.

Trump’s allies dismiss the concerns as alarmism and cynical political attacks.

Some experts on authoritar­ianism said while Trump’s recent language has begun to more closely resemble that used by leaders like Adolf Hitler or Benito Mussolini, he does not quite mirror fascist leaders of the past. Still, they say, he does exhibit traits similar to current strongmen like Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban or Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

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