Civic Forum

Civic Forum

How Trump Has Changed the Presidency | Julia Azari, Marquette University

42 min · 3 de mar de 2026
Portada del episodio How Trump Has Changed the Presidency | Julia Azari, Marquette University

Descripción

How has Donald Trump changed the American presidency? How does his challenge to the Constitution fit in context with other backlash presidents like Andrew Johnson and Richard Nixon? In this episode of The Civic Forum, Rory is joined by Julia Azari, a leading scholar of presidential politics. They debrief the State of the Union, and then discuss Azari's theory of backlash presidencies. They close with a lengthy discussion of race and authoritarianism in America.

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episode Trump's Authoritarianism: The View from Europe | Marcel Dirsus, The Next Best artwork

Trump's Authoritarianism: The View from Europe | Marcel Dirsus, The Next Best

In this episode of The Civic Forum, Rory speaks with authoritarianism scholar Dr. Marcel Dirsus, author of How Tyrants Fall, about whether the US is entering a period of authoritarianism and what stands out as unique about Trump. They discuss democratic backsliding, how governments tilt the electoral playing field, and why threats to the judiciary and control of security forces are key warning signs. They examine ICE as a potentially paramilitary, politically loyal force that could be used for intimidation, vote suppression, or protest crackdowns, and contrast these risks with the U.S. military’s tradition of nonpartisanship. The conversation also covers how authoritarian leaders can pressure media without overt violence, how incompetence and sycophancy create blind spots and policy blunders and Dirsus’s “dictator’s treadmill” and corruption as mechanisms that trap leaders and bind elites through shared risk. They explore elite defection dynamics inside the Republican Party, debates over accountability versus “golden parachutes,” and practical advice for ordinary citizens focused on winning elections, coordinated nonviolent resistance, and preventing hopelessness.

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