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The provided text, "America's Authoritarian Drift: Lessons from Hungary and Turkey," analyzes how the United States, particularly under a potential second Trump term, exhibits characteristics of competitive authoritarianism, a system where elections exist but incumbents manipulate institutions to maintain power. It details several tactics paralleling those used by leaders like Orbán in Hungary and Erdoğan in Turkey, including centralizing power through loyalist appointments and agency dismantling, attacking judicial independence via intimidation and defiance of rulings, and controlling media narratives through state-aligned ecosystems and harassment of critics. The text also highlights the dismantling of the civil service via executive orders, the weaponization of state resources against perceived enemies, and the targeting of vulnerable groups through divisive rhetoric and policies. Ultimately, the source warns that the velocity of democratic backsliding in the U.S. is unprecedented, with global implications for democratic norms and alliances.
By Earl CottenThe provided text, "America's Authoritarian Drift: Lessons from Hungary and Turkey," analyzes how the United States, particularly under a potential second Trump term, exhibits characteristics of competitive authoritarianism, a system where elections exist but incumbents manipulate institutions to maintain power. It details several tactics paralleling those used by leaders like Orbán in Hungary and Erdoğan in Turkey, including centralizing power through loyalist appointments and agency dismantling, attacking judicial independence via intimidation and defiance of rulings, and controlling media narratives through state-aligned ecosystems and harassment of critics. The text also highlights the dismantling of the civil service via executive orders, the weaponization of state resources against perceived enemies, and the targeting of vulnerable groups through divisive rhetoric and policies. Ultimately, the source warns that the velocity of democratic backsliding in the U.S. is unprecedented, with global implications for democratic norms and alliances.