The other risk Trump poses besides patrimonialism is competitive authoritarianism. In other words, something that is no longer democratic, but not fully a dictatorship:
What lies ahead is not fascist or single-party dictatorship but competitive authoritarianism—a system in which parties compete in elections but the incumbent’s abuse of power tilts the playing field against the opposition. . . . Under competitive authoritarianism, the formal architecture of democracy, including multiparty elections, remains intact. Opposition forces are legal and aboveground, and they contest seriously for power. Elections are often fiercely contested battles in which incumbents have to sweat it out. And once in a while, incumbents lose . . . But the system is not democratic, because incumbents rig the game by deploying the machinery of government to attack opponents and co-opt critics. Competition is real but unfair.One obvious tool for rigging the system is the use of selective prosecution:
The most visible means of weaponizing the state is through targeted prosecution. Virtually all elected autocratic governments deploy justice ministries, public prosecutors’ offices, and tax and intelligence agencies to investigate and prosecute rival politicians, media companies, editors, journalists, business leaders, universities, and other critics. In traditional dictatorships, critics are often charged with crimes such as sedition, treason, or plotting insurrection, but contemporary autocrats tend to prosecute critics for more mundane offenses, such as corruption, tax evasion, defamation, and even minor violations of arcane rules. If investigators look hard enough, they can usually find petty infractions such as unreported income on tax returns or noncompliance with rarely enforced regulations.While the independent judiciary will probably protect Trump's opponents from imprisonment, the time and expense of defending against completely meritless prosecutions can be ruinous. And regulatory actions are more easily politicized. The author offers as an obvious example IRS audits and withdrawal of non-profit status for unfriendly organizations. I was very much afraid of that myself ahead of the election. At least for now, DOGE seems more interested in crippling the IRS than weaponizing it. The author also warns (correctly) about attempts to coerce higher education with the threat of withholding funds and frivolous libel suits. One thing neither he nor I anticipated -- denying security clearance and access to government buildings to law firms that oppose the Administration or its supporters. That is proving to be extremely dangerous.
And other forms of abuse are easily deployed:
A weaponized state is not merely a tool to punish opponents. It can also be used to build support. Governments in competitive authoritarian regimes routinely use economic policy and regulatory decisions to reward politically friendly individuals, firms, and organizations. Business leaders, media companies, universities, and other organizations have as much to gain as they have to lose from government antitrust decisions, the issuing of permits and licenses, the awarding of government contracts and concessions, the waiving of regulations or tariffs, and the conferral of tax-exempt status. If they believe that these decisions are made on political rather than technical grounds, they have a strong incentive to align themselves with incumbents.This is already well underway.
None of this would be entirely new for the United States. Presidents have weaponized government agencies before. The FBI director J. Edgar Hoover deployed the agency as a political weapon for the six presidents he served. The Nixon administration wielded the Justice Department and other agencies against perceived enemies. But the contemporary period differs in important ways. For one, global democratic standards have risen considerably. By any contemporary measure, the United States was considerably less democratic in the 1950s than it is today. A return to mid-twentieth-century practices would, by itself, constitute significant democratic backsliding.
More important, the coming weaponization of government will likely go well beyond mid-twentieth-century practices. Fifty years ago, both major U.S. parties were internally heterogeneous, relatively moderate, and broadly committed to democratic rules of the game. Today, these parties are far more polarized, and a radicalized Republican Party has abandoned its long-standing commitment to basic democratic rules, including accepting electoral defeat and unambiguously rejecting violence.Moreover, much of the Republican Party now embraces the idea that America’s institutions—from the federal bureaucracy and public schools to the media and private universities—have been corrupted by left-wing ideologies. Authoritarian movements commonly embrace the notion that their country’s institutions have been subverted by enemies. . .The author then goes on to offer at least some grounds for hope. The United States has more independent institutions -- governmental and private -- than many other democracies that were subverted. And Trump is less popular than most successful authoritarian leaders consolidating power. Although, I will add, an authoritarian is most dangerous at the outset when he is most popular. That popularity can offer cover for subverting democracy. Once the subversion is complete and the leader has established a dictatorship, the danger is greatest when the leader becomes unpopular -- it is at that point that the leader throws off the democratic mask and becomes openly dictatorial. (See Russia, Venezuela, Turkey, with Hungary trending that way fast). Hence rule number on of smart authoritarians -- save the unpopular stuff until after you consolidate power. Trump, needless to say, is blatantly violating this rule.
But none of that is a guarantee that he will be stopped. Most people, after all, are easily intimidated. Even modestly raising the costs of opposition may be enough to allow consolidation of power.
Although I will throw in this article -- by two Hungarians -- to argue the advantages the US has over Hungary in opposing a dictator:
Unlike the two main parties in the United States, Fidesz holds no primaries, and it has been systematically deprived of internal diversity because all of its senior ranks are subservient to Orban. As party leader, the Hungarian prime minister has the right to handpick all parliamentary and local (mayoral) candidates; he decides on the parliamentary group leader; and he can freely replace members of his administration who have no independent, let alone opposing, agenda or ambition. There is no loyalty to Fidesz as an organization—only to Orban.. . . .
Trump’s rampage through the federal bureaucracy and efforts to begin purges of civil servants, along with his flurry of executive orders that demonstratively challenge constitutional limitations on executive power, may seem shocking to U.S. democratic norms. But none of these plans have been put before Congress, and many of them will face legal and legislative roadblocks before they can be fully implemented. By contrast, Orban has been able to use his disciplined supermajority in parliament to formally change Hungary’s legal foundations: tax laws, reforms, and even electoral amendments are regularly passed within days. Even the new constitution of Hungary has been amended 14 times by Fidesz without public debate—something impossible in the United States, where constitutional amendments have been comparatively rare, requiring not only broad congressional approval but a laborious process of state ratification.
The federal foundations of American democracy also give U.S. states considerable leeway to set their own policies, including in education and environmental standards. They can also use their own legal authority to challenge federal laws and the behavior of the federal government, as groups of states have already done in response to some of Trump’s executive orders. Hungary offers no such federal balance. Instead, Orban has centralized power by stripping municipalities of most of their competences and revenues.
Finally, the diversity of U.S. news organizations makes it much more difficult for Trump to wield decisive influence over the media. In Hungary, the Orban regime controls media revenues, and independent news media account for just 21 percent of the market by income. It’s important to note, as well, that the culture of debate is very different in the United States, even in a media and social media environment in which Trump has gained considerable influence, than it is in Hungary. Fox News, which is often considered a Trump mouthpiece and has close ties to many officials in the Trump administration, nevertheless also features Democrats in its programs and has organized debates between the two parties’ candidates. By contrast, in Hungary’s 2022 parliamentary election, Hungarian public television, which has long served as a platform for government propaganda, provided the joint opposition candidate a total of five minutes of airtime during the entire campaign.
The authors also mention a danger that is both more and less serious than in Hungary -- Elon Musk. In Hungary, wealth is dependent on political connections. Hungary's richest man became so solely because of his ties to Viktor Orban. Musk's came by his wealth independently of any political ties, but is using it to attempt to buy up the government:
Whereas Trump, following Orban, seeks to weaken the institutions of public deliberation, Musk is undermining the principle of elected government by appropriating for himself powers that are reserved for the state. This is not a case of regulated privatization or transparent outsourcing but of big oligarchy. By using his immense economic power to integrate himself into politics, Musk is effectively buying statelike powers and threatening the foundations of liberal democracy. . . . U.S. democracy is unlikely to be replaced by a full-fledged Hungarian-style autocracy any time soon, though it may face another challenge: the rise of an oligarch, a high-tech loose cannon, whom neither the president nor the state can entirely control.
I will finally add that Trump has one clear disadvantage compared to leaders such as Hugo Chavez, Vladimir Putin, Recep Erdogan, and Viktor Orban. He is much older than any of these leaders (all came to power in their 40's) and therefore does not have as much time to consolidate his power.
I plan to write more later on about further implications of patrimonialism and competitive authoritarianism.