Book description
The new U.S. president doesnât read books, but for everyone else, thereâs Cody Walkerâs The Trumpiad, a blistering and hilarious take on Americaâs political collapse. "Key Difference: I wouldnât lump / Trump / in with Hitler and Mussolini. / Trumpâs hands are littler. (Theyâre teeny.)" The Trumpiad will be published on April 29th 2017, which, if no one manages to stop him, will mark Trumpâs 100th day in office.
Recommended on 1 episode:
Trump 2.0 and the Return of âCourt Politicsâ
The preview weâve had into Donald Trumpâs second administration already feels, by American standards, disturbingly abnormal: Picking a former âFox and Friendsâ host for defense secretary. Billionaire after billionaire trekking to Mar-a-Lago to curry favor with the president-elect. The Washington Post withholding an opposing endorsement. Meta ending its third-party fact-checking.
But all of this is actually pretty normal â not in the U.S. but in many other countries. Researchers call them personalist regimes, in which everything is a transaction with the leader, whether itâs party politics or policymaking or the media. Itâs a style of politics that follows different rules, but there are still rules. And understanding personalist politics, and their tried-and-true playbook, is a way to help make the next four years legible.
Todayâs guest is one of the leading scholars on personalist regimes, in both their democratic and their authoritarian forms. Erica Frantz is a political scientist at Michigan State University and an author of âThe Origins of Elected Strongmen: How Personalist Parties Destroy Democracy From Within.â In this conversation, we discuss what personalist regimes are and how they operate, the personalist qualities of Trump and the signs of democratic backsliding that Frantz thinks Americans need to track in the coming weeks and years.
This episode contains strong language.
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