Thursday, January 15, 2026

FASCIST AMERICA 2026: Joy Reid On Trump Year 2: A Sick and Tired America And the Ongoing Horrific Violent Assault by ICE on Minneapolis, Minnesota and the Human, Constitutional, and Civil Rights of Its Citizens

Trump Year 2: A Sick & Tired America | The Joy Reid Show LIVE!



The Joy Reid Show

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VIDEO:
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8O7pY7LoXXs



ABOUT JOY REID:

Joy-Ann Lomena Reid (AKA Joy Reid) is a best-selling American author, political journalist and TV host. She was a national correspondent for MSNBC and is best known for hosting the Emmy-nominated, NAACP Award-winning political commentary and analysis show, The ReidOut, from 2020 to 2025. Her previous anchoring credits include The Reid Report (2014–2015) and AM Joy (2016–2020). 

 
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FASCIST AMERICA 2026: Michelle Goldberg On What the Murder of Renee Nicole Good by ICE and the Fascist Thugs Who Run Our Federal Government Means Not Only For Minnesota but the Entire Country

By Killing Renee Good, ICE Sent a Message to Us All


Credit: Tim Evans/Reuters


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by Michelle Goldberg
January 8, 2026
New York Times

Leer en espaƱol

Throughout Donald Trump’s second term, when he’s sent armed, masked ICE agents into cities, locals have tried to resist by organizing neighborhood watches, both to warn people that agents are coming and to document the arrests they make. Minneapolis, where this week ICE launched what its acting director called the “largest immigration operation ever,” was no different.

Keith Ellison, Minnesota’s attorney general, told me that since ICE ramped up its operations in Minneapolis, it’s felt “like we are being inundated with a hostile paramilitary group that is mistreating, insulting, terrorizing our neighbors.” And the residents of Minneapolis have responded: “People have got their whistles, and they’ve got their little alert system to tell people ICE is in the neighborhood. They’ve been protesting. They’ve been out there trying to protect their neighbors.”

Many of these people probably believed that even in Trump’s America, citizens still have inviolable liberties that allow them to stand up to the jacked-up irregulars who’ve descended on their communities. The civil rights of immigrants have been profoundly curtailed; even green card holders are on notice that this government may detain and deport them simply for protesting. But Americans — particularly, let’s be honest, white Americans — might have thought themselves immune from ICE abuses.

The killing of Renee Nicole Good, a mother of three and widow of a military veteran, tests that assumption. ICE, said Ellison, is all but telling people, “‘You want to defend your neighbors, you’re going to do it at the risk of your own life.’ I think that’s the unmistakable message. Just looking at the tape, they could have said, ‘You get out of here,’ right? And then she gets out of there. They didn’t want her to get out of there. They wanted to either drag her out of that car or do what they did. And it was all about teaching lessons.”

The lesson didn’t end with Good’s killing — the administration had to smear her afterward. As The New York Times reported, bystander footage filmed from several different angles shows that the agent who shot Good wasn’t in the path of her S.U.V. when he fired on her. That did not stop Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem from accusing Good of trying to run agents over in “an act of domestic terrorism.” Vice President JD Vance called her a “deranged leftist.”

In the imagination of some on the right, Good quickly came to stand in for all the grating Resistance moms they’d like to see crushed. Fox News sneered that Good was a “self-proclaimed poet” — she’s the winner of a prestigious poetry award — “with pronouns in her bio.” The conservative radio host Erick Erickson described her as an “AWFUL,” or “Affluent White Female Urban Liberal.”

It’s entirely possible that had Good lived, the Trump administration might have tried to prosecute her. That’s essentially what happened to Marimar Martinez, a U.S. citizen in Chicago, in October. Martinez was in her car trying to warn people about ICE when she collided with a Border Patrol vehicle. Federal officials claimed she “rammed” a car driven by the agent Charles Exum, while her lawyers say he sideswiped her. Exum then got out of his car and shot her five times.

Martinez survived, only for the Justice Department to charge her with assaulting a federal officer. Her lawyers soon discovered that Exum had been boasting about the shooting in text messages. In one, he wrote, “I fired 5 rounds, and she had 7 holes. Put that in your book boys.” In another, he said, “Sweet. My fifteen mins of fame. Lmao.” The Justice Department ended up dropping the case before even more messages could be revealed.

Exum’s giddy sadism shouldn’t have been surprising; it reflects the culture the administration is encouraging among its immigration enforcers. In one ICE recruiting ad, an agent mans a mounted gun atop some sort of militarized vehicle, with the words, “Destroy the flood.” It was a reference to the video game Halo, where players must kill hostile space aliens. Another shows sword-wielding knights with the words, “The enemies are at the gates.”

Homeland Security’s social media feed is an unending stream of demented propaganda and bellicose Christian nationalism. An image posted on New Year’s Eve shows a classic car on an idyllic beach with the slogan, “America after 100 million deportations.” Homeland Security has added the words, “The peace of a nation no longer besieged by the third world.” One hundred million, it’s important to note, is almost twice America’s entire immigrant population. They are telegraphing the creation of a far-reaching police state.

In such a system, the relationship between citizens and their government is transformed by the constant demand for submission. Since Good’s death, Republicans have been lining up to threaten those who don’t immediately comply with ICE’s orders. “The bottom line is this: When a federal officer gives you instructions, you abide by them and then you get to keep your life,” Representative Wesley Hunt of Texas said on Newsmax.

All of us, citizens and immigrants alike, are being ruled by people who think life is a privilege bestowed by authority, and death is a fair penalty for disobedience.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


Michelle Goldberg has been an Opinion columnist since 2017. She is the author of several books about politics, religion and women’s rights and was part of a team that won a Pulitzer Prize for public service in 2018 for reporting on workplace sexual harassment.


More on border patrol:


Opinion | Sarah Wildman
‘The System Is Meant to Break You’: What ICE Is Doing to People Here Legally
Nov. 21, 2025

Opinion | Jemmy Jimenez Rosa, Ayman Soliman, Jasmine Mooney, Francesca Trianni, Alexander Stockton and Sarah Wildmane Followed the Rules. ICE Jailed Us Anyway.
Nov. 17, 2025

Opinion
Separation: A Family Navigates the Risks of Being Undocumented

FASCIST AMERICA 2026: "The First White President" by Ta-Nehisi Coates--The Atlantic October 2017 issue published on September 7, 2017)

 "What's Past is Prologue..." 

“...It is often said that Trump has no real ideology, which is not true—his ideology is white supremacy, in all its truculent and sanctimonious power. Trump inaugurated his campaign by casting himself as the defender of white maidenhood against Mexican “rapists,” only to be later alleged by multiple accusers, and by his own proud words, to be a sexual violator himself...In Trump, white supremacists see one of their own. Only grudgingly did Trump denounce the Ku Klux Klan and David Duke, one of its former grand wizards—and after the clashes between white supremacists and counterprotesters in Charlottesville, Virginia, in August, Duke in turn praised Trump’s contentious claim that “both sides” were responsible for the violence.

To Trump, whiteness is neither notional nor symbolic but is the very core of his power. In this, Trump is not singular. But whereas his forebears carried whiteness like an ancestral talisman, Trump cracked the glowing amulet open, releasing its eldritch energies. The repercussions are striking: Trump is the first president to have served in no public capacity before ascending to his perch. But more telling, Trump is also the first president to have publicly affirmed that his daughter is a “piece of ass.” The mind seizes trying to imagine a black man extolling the virtues of sexual assault on tape (“When you’re a star, they let you do it”), fending off multiple accusations of such assaults, immersed in multiple lawsuits for allegedly fraudulent business dealings, exhorting his followers to violence, and then strolling into the White House. But that is the point of white supremacy—to ensure that that which all others achieve with maximal effort, white people (particularly white men) achieve with minimal qualification. Barack Obama delivered to black people the hoary message that if they work twice as hard as white people, anything is possible. But Trump’s counter is persuasive: Work half as hard as black people, and even more is possible…
Before Barack Obama, niggers could be manufactured out of Sister Souljahs, Willie Hortons, and Dusky Sallys. But Donald Trump arrived in the wake of something more potent—an entire nigger presidency with nigger health care, nigger climate accords, and nigger justice reform, all of which could be targeted for destruction or redemption, thus reifying the idea of being white. Trump truly is something new—the first president whose entire political existence hinges on the fact of a black president. And so it will not suffice to say that Trump is a white man like all the others who rose to become president. He must be called by his rightful honorific—America’s first white president…

—Ta-Nehisi Coates, “The First White President” The Atlantic, September 7, 2017

The First White President
by Ta-Nehisi Coates
October 2017 Issue
The Atlantic

[Published on September 7, 2017]:


The foundation of Donald Trump’s presidency is the negation of Barack Obama’s legacy.


Audio version of Ta-Nehisi Coates' article for The Atlantic: 

https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/...

AUDIO: 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qk1yAkN44Sghttps://www.youtube.com/embed/qk1yAkN44Sg

All,

Raging white house white supremacists get caught as always in a BIG LIE and typically double/triple down and LIE SOME MORE in vile “defense" of their first series of LIES. This is yet another brazen example from the Orwellian demon chamber run by the bilious billionaire sociopath in charge of what the word PATHOLOGICAL truly means…Stay tuned because as bad as it is it’s only GUARANTEED to get far worse. Probably by the very next time the hopelessly infantile Daddy Tee TWEETS again (which should be any…minute…now)….


Kofi

FASCIST AMERICA 2026: Prominent Veteran Journalist and Political Analyst John Harwood States: "The Essence of Trump 2.0 Is Violent White Supremacy The Veil is off: the MAGA president is openly taking the country back to its violent, racist past.

The Essence of Trump 2.0 Is Violent White Supremacy
 
The veil is off: the MAGA president is openly taking 
the country back to its violent, racist past.

by John Harwood
January 15, 2026
Zeteo

Tune In TODAY:

Join me for a Substack Live at 2 pm ET (11 am PT, 7 pm GMT) today with author Robert P. Jones, whose books and polling have long documented white supremacy in the US. We will discuss my column below, ICE’s latest actions in Minneapolis, and the Trump administration’s recent posts echoing Nazi slogans. Plus, we’ll take your questions.

Mark Your Calendar


PHOTO:  Protesters rally against the Trump administration in Hingham, Massachusetts, on Aug. 13, 2025. Photo by Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

In 1980, Republican candidate Ronald Reagan ousted Democratic President Jimmy Carter by consolidating the political realignment that followed the civil rights movement.

Reagan used symbolism to court aggrieved white conservatives, delivering a “states’ rights” speech in the infamous Mississippi town where Ku Klux Klansmen had murdered three civil rights workers 16 years earlier. But his rhetoric reflected the 20th-century evolution in right-wing racial politics, from raw and ugly to sly and subtle.

The following year, a young White House aide explained that evolution in an interview:

“You start out in 1954 by saying, ‘n*****, n*****, n*****,’” Lee Atwater began. “By 1968, you can’t say ‘n****r’ – that hurts you, backfires. So you say stuff like ‘forced busing,’ ‘states’ rights’…abstract.”

“Now you’re talking about cutting taxes, and all these…totally economic things. A byproduct of them is Blacks get hurt worse than whites. ‘We want to cut this,’ is much more abstract than even the busing thing.”

Cynical though it was, the shift reflected progress; modern America had made overt racism broadly unacceptable. That’s why conservative politicians took umbrage when journalists like me spotlighted their veiled appeals.

Nearly a half-century later, Donald Trump’s throwback administration has discarded the veils. Its essence, in plain sight, is white supremacy enforced with violence.

The 79-year-old president also conjures even more repugnant demons. Before his rise, comparing political opponents to Nazis was famously considered too shrill and extreme to be credible.

That’s no longer true. With words, actions, and appointments, Trump invites those comparisons.
 
Trump 2.0 Rips Off the Mask


Wednesday, January 14, 2026

FASCIST AMERICA 2026: Brilliant and As Always National Treasure Journalists, Public Intellectuals, Truth Tellers, and Progressive Media Producers Wajahat Ali and Danielle Moodie On What a FASCIST Infrastructure Looks Like

This Is What a FASCIST Infrastructure Looks Like!!


Wajahat Ali

January 13, 2026


VIDEO: 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P28Dbwvr6I8

#BreakingNews #AmericanCrisis #Authoritarianism


America’s darkest forces aren’t lurking in the shadows anymore they’re operating in plain sight. Wajahat Ali and Danielle Moodie break down how white supremacy, misogyny, and authoritarian power have fused into a federal machine from ICE’s militarization to the normalization of extremist language and state violence. This isn’t about ideology anymore. It’s about infrastructure and who it’s being built to crush. 

 
http://Thelefthook.substack.com#BreakingNews #AmericaInCrisis #Authoritarianism #ICE #Trump #Accountability #CivilRights #democracy#wajahatali #daniellemoodie #news #maga #white #news






FASCIST AMERICA 2026: The Vicious Federal Government's War On The Human, Constitutional, and Civil Rights Of the U.S. Citizens in Minneapolis Minnesota. Who and What Is Going To Stop This Carnage?

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/13/us/ice-videos-minnesota-trump-immigration.html


Skirmishes between residents and heavily armed federal agents have been nerve-racking for residents in Minneapolis. Credit: by David Guttenfelder/the New York Times

Listen to this article · 8:44 minutes

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‘Like a Military Occupation’: Clashes Rise With Federal Agents in Minneapolis

Arrests and aggressive tactics by ICE and the Border Patrol, many seen on viral videos, have intensified the frustration and fear among residents  

by Thomas Fuller and Jazmine Ulloa

Jazmine Ulloa reported from Minneapolis.

Updated January 14, 2026, 7:17 a.m. ET

The video shows a young employee in a reflective vest being hauled away by federal agents from the entrance of a Target store in a Minneapolis suburb.

“I’m a U.S. citizen!” the worker shouted as the armed agents shoved him into an S.U.V. after he had directed expletives at one. “U.S. citizen! U.S. citizen!”

In and around Minneapolis in recent days — in quiet residential neighborhoods and busy shopping districts, at gas station and big box store parking lots — similar chaotic scenes are unfolding, an escalation of tensions between residents and federal agents as the Trump administration intensifies its immigration crackdown in Minnesota after the killing of Renee Good by an immigration officer last week.

“It feels like our community is under siege by our own federal government,” said State Representative Michael Howard, a Democrat whose district includes Richfield, where the Target employee and another colleague were seized.

Video

“Look at that.

Videos showing a Target employee shouting expletives at a federal agent before being tackled in Richfield, Minn., have been widely circulated online and shared by a member of Congress. In another video the employee yells, “I’m a U.S. citizen.”CreditCredit...@chris_123_56, via Instagram, Rep. Jimmy Gomez, via Facebook

Mr. Howard said both workers were U.S. citizens and were later released. The Department of Homeland Security said the Target worker seen in the video was arrested in connection with “assaulting, resisting or impeding federal officers.” It was unclear on Tuesday if the employee had been charged.

Federal officers are descending on streets in what they say is an effort to find undocumented immigrants with criminal and dangerous backgrounds. They are displaying a show of force they argue is necessary in cities and states where local governments and law enforcement agencies have refused to help them. But many residents, business owners and immigrant workers have denounced the tactics, saying the agents are indiscriminately sweeping up hard-working friends and neighbors based on racial and ethnic profiling, and are increasingly organizing to push back.

The skirmishes between residents and the heavily armed federal agents have been especially nerve-racking for residents of Minneapolis, where the memories of the 2020 murder of George Floyd — and the protests and rioting that followed — are still raw. This time, residents and elected officials say, the fear is not abuses by law enforcement but an encroaching federal government.


Federal agents outside a home in Minneapolis on Tuesday. Credit:  Todd Heisler/The New York Times


Protesters gathered around a home where agents arrested two people on Tuesday. Credit: Todd Heisler/The New York Times


Federal agents deployed tear gas as some protesters shouted and threw snowballs in their direction. Credit:  David Guttenfelder/The New York Times

Local concerns over the federal government grew on Tuesday when six federal prosecutors in Minnesota resigned over the Justice Department’s push to investigate the widow of Ms. Good and questions over whether the shooter would be investigated.

Homeland security officials have made roughly 2,400 immigration-related arrests in Minnesota since Nov. 29, said Tricia McLaughlin, a spokeswoman for the department. Some of those immigrants have been convicted of sex crimes, armed robbery, drug crimes and other offenses, federal officials said. But it was not clear how many of the people immigration agents had arrested had criminal records. The number of arrests does not include protesters.

As the surge has intensified, so have the efforts among activists, community volunteers and live streamers to document federal agents’ aggressive tactics. Federal officials and local residents both say the presence of the other on the street is making the situation worse.

Images circulating on social media over the past two days and verified by The New York Times show agents approaching a car at a gas station, seeking out the immigration status of the driver and demanding that he open the door. When he doesn’t, they break the window of the car and remove him. Gregory Bovino, a Border Patrol official, yells at bystanders to back up.

Video

At a gas station in St. Paul, Minn., federal agents smashed the side window of a Jeep, and pulled a man out and tackled him.Credit Credit: Status Coup News/Jon Farina, via Storyful

In another video, Elliott Payne, president of the Minneapolis City Council, is seen being shoved by an agent.

Mr. Payne said in an interview on Tuesday that federal agents with assault rifles and combat gear were patrolling the streets in convoys. At night, they shine lights from the vehicles onto pedestrians, he said.

“This is a military occupation, and it feels like a military occupation,” Mr. Payne said.

Mr. Payne said federal agents scream obscenities at residents and repeatedly holster and unholster their weapons. “It’s like living in a war zone,” he said. The federal presence was not ubiquitous. Residents said the federal agents were concentrated in areas with large immigrant populations and were absent in others.


Christian Molina stood by his damaged car after federal immigration officers crashed into the vehicle and questioned his immigration status on Monday. He was released after proving he was a U.S. citizen. Credit: Jamie Kelter Davis for The New York Times


Residents and activists recorded federal agents after they rammed Christian Molina’s car, according to Mr. Molina and a witness. Credit: Jamie Kelter Davis for The New York Times


Federal agents have been deploying pepper spray and tear gas to scatter residents and activists. Credit: Jamie Kelter Davis for The New York Times

President Trump said Tuesday that federal agents were in Minnesota to remove “convicted murderers, drug dealers and addicts, rapists, violent released and escaped prisoners, dangerous people from foreign mental institutions and insane asylums, and other deadly criminals.”

Mr. Trump wrote on social media that “THE DAY OF RECKONING AND RETRIBUTION” is coming for Minnesota, without elaborating.

On Monday, the Department of Homeland Security said Minnesota was not cooperating with the federal government and said 1,360 illegal immigrants were in Minnesota prisons. The department demanded that they be handed over to the federal authorities when released.

Mr. Howard, the state representative, said federal agents for the most part did not have warrants and were staging in the parking lots of stores and apartment complexes and targeting people of color, asking for proof of citizenship.

“Nothing about that is making our communities more safe,” he said. “We have many people in our community that are undocumented, but they are valued members of our community.”

For many in Minneapolis, where 70 percent of people voted Democratic in the 2024 presidential election, the resistance from neighborhood groups and community volunteers has felt empowering in what has felt like a hopeless time, residents said in interviews.

But even some of those in favor of the community defense efforts were on edge that protesters could go too far. Residents said they were worried that with the number of agents patrolling the area and heightened tensions, weapons would be fired, deliberately or by accident.

“It’s just a matter of time before something else occurs. Another person shot. ICE agents injured,” said Maurice Ward, 54, who runs a social justice organization.

Video

“I am U.S. citizen.

Nimco Omar filmed an encounter with masked Border Patrol agents, who repeatedly asked her for identification to prove her citizenship and where she was born.CreditCredit...Nimco Omar, via Storyful

On Monday afternoon, a few blocks away from where Ms. Good was killed, witnesses recounted how a group of federal agents had crashed their vehicle into a car that they had been trying to stop. As officers spoke to the driver, a crowd began to swell. Neighbors rushed out and groups of activists who had been following and filming the agents arrived, many whistling and shouting.

“Get out of our city!” they yelled.

Some threw snowballs at the officers and pelted their vehicles with water bottles. The agents deployed pepper spray and tear gas, sending residents scattering.

In an interview later, Christian Morales, 40, said he had been driving to his mechanic shop when he noticed what could be federal agents sitting in a vehicle in an alley. They began to follow him, he believed, solely for looking Hispanic.

He said he was grateful for the community volunteers and neighbors who came out, some in sweats and pajamas, to document the scene, and he believed their presence was why agents ultimately left him alone. But he also worried whether some of the volunteers shouting obscenities at agents emboldened them.

“It makes them act different, like they have more power,” he said.

Mr. Payne, the City Council president, said he was encouraging residents to take video of federal agents, which he said could be used as evidence in legal action that state and local officials are pursuing against the federal government over the deployments.

A lawsuit filed on Monday by the state of Minnesota and the cities of Minneapolis and St. Paul asked a judge to block the federal government from “implementing the unprecedented surge in Minnesota.”

The lawsuit said “thousands of armed and masked D.H.S. agents have stormed the Twin Cities to conduct militarized raids and carry out dangerous, illegal and unconstitutional stops and arrests.”

On Monday night near a fast-food restaurant in South Minneapolis, whistling began to fill the air, a warning by volunteers that federal agents were in the area. Two immigrant workers locked the doors of the restaurant. Muna Ahmed, 37, who had walked in to order a sandwich, was grateful for the signal. A former hospital interpreter of Somali heritage, Ms. Ahmed was in disbelief over the hostility of federal officers on the streets.


“This is not the America I know,” she said.

Ernesto LondoƱo, Mitch Smith, Madeleine Ngo, Sonia A. Rao and Arijeta Lajka contributed reporting. Sheelagh McNeill contributed research.

 

ABOUT THE AUTHORS:

Thomas Fuller, a Page One Correspondent for The Times, writes and rewrites stories for the front page.

Jazmine Ulloa is a national reporter covering immigration for The Times.

A version of this article appears in print on Jan. 14, 2026, Section A, Page 15 of the New York edition with the headline: Clashes With Federal Agents Rise in Minneapolis. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper 


See more on: U.S. Politics, Homeland Security Department, Donald Trump


More on the Minnesota ICE Shooting

FASCIST AMERICA 2026: Prominent Journalist, Political Analyst, Historian, and Critic Jamelle Bouie On the Meaning Of the Openly Dictatorial Rule Of The Delusional Avatar of MAGA and the GOP Within the Oppressive National and International Confines Of the Fascist Trump Regime


Credit: Eric Lee for The New York Times


Listen to this article · 6:30 minutes

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This Is Not How a Normal President Speaks
by Jamelle Bouie
January 14, 2026
New York Times

Not long after his second inauguration — and still-riding high on his return to power, President Trump issued a stark proclamation on social media. “He who saves his Country does not violate any Law,” he wrote on both X and his Truth Social platform, paraphrasing Sergei Bondarchuk’s 1970 film “Waterloo.” Since Trump saw himself as saving the country, the message was simple: He was beyond the law, if not above it outright. This wasn’t a feint; in the weeks and months to follow, his administration would break, skirt and ignore the law in pursuit of the president’s agenda.

As he nears the end of the first year of his second term, Trump has turned his attention to the world abroad. Days after the start of the new year, he launched an attack on Venezuela that killed dozens of people and ended with the “kidnapping” — a word the president said was “not a bad term” for what happened — of NicolĆ”s Maduro, the nation’s authoritarian ruler. Flush with the glow of a successful operation, Trump then threatened military action against Cuba — demanding that the nation’s regime negotiate “BEFORE IT IS TOO LATE” — and raised the possibility of strikes on Mexico. He has also begun to talk threateningly again about Greenland, in what appears to be a naked land grab fueled by dreams of 19th century-style territorial expansion. (And why Greenland? Well, it is the nearest large landmass on the Mercator projection and Trump is nothing if not a simple man.)

Defending all of this in a recent interview with four of my Times colleagues, Trump declared that he was not subject to international law, or really any law, in his conduct of foreign affairs. “I don’t need international law,” he said, “I’m not looking to hurt people.” Asked if there were any limits on his power, Trump named his own conscience. “Yeah, there is one thing,” he said. “My own morality. My own mind. It’s the only thing that can stop me.”

In his 2024 campaign for the White House, Trump told cheering audiences that he would be a “dictator,” but only for one day. This interview, to say nothing of his actions over the past year, makes clear that Trump sees himself as something like a dictator, and he wants to be one for a bit longer than 24 hours. Trump is, in his mind, an elected monarch — although not an enlightened one — whose whims are law and whose power extends to every inch of the United States and every corner of the Western Hemisphere.

It should go without saying that this is not how a normal president speaks. Virtually all previous presidents have understood themselves as they are: agents of the federal Constitution. Even Andrew Jackson, condemned as “King Andrew the First” by his Whig opponents for his unapologetic expansion of presidential authority, described himself as an “instrument” of the Constitution and promised, in his first inaugural address, to “keep steadily in view the limitations as well as the extent of the Executive power trusting thereby to discharge the functions of my office without transcending its authority.”

Trump’s assertion of unlimited authority — subject only to his moral judgment and his mind (whatever that means) — is a total rejection of popular sovereignty and the logic of the Constitution. And for as much as the Trump administration speaks of defending “Western civilization,” the president’s MAGA absolutism is also a challenge to the foundations of the Anglo-American political tradition — to the settlement of the Glorious Revolution and the defeat of Stuart claims of divine right and parliamentary subordination.

Another way to understand this is that Trump does not see himself as a constitutional officer. His power, as he sees it, flows from his own person — not the office and certainly not the people, whose only role, in his view, is to legitimize his desires. Trump is an anti-constitutional figure — whose very presence on the American political scene is nothing less than a full-spectrum assault on republican government and democracy. And it is a testament to the rot in our political system that in a little less than a year, he has — with the help of Republicans in Congress — put the American republic on life support, where it struggles with the creeping sickness of despotism.

In fairness to Trump, however, he is not solely to blame for the present state of affairs. His claim to unlimited president power rests significantly on the work of the chief justice of the United States, John Roberts. In Trump v. United States, Roberts and his Republican colleagues anointed the office of the presidency with immunity from criminal prosecution for “official acts,” defined — somewhat vaguely — as anything extending from the president’s “core constitutional powers.”

Never mind that this language had no basis in the constitutional text or its drafting and ratification. Never mind that the framers, in fact, seemed to accept the possibility that a president might be criminally prosecuted for actions in office following impeachment and removal. For Roberts, judicial accountability for wrongdoing was secondary to separation of powers and the “energy” of the executive. The president, in his view, has to be able to act, and the aim of Trump v. U.S. was to allow the president to perform the full breadth of his duties without ever needing to look behind his back.

I think Roberts saw this as a modest effort to make government work better and preclude the prospect of tit-for-tat prosecutions after each presidential election. But to Trump, Roberts’s ruling was a license to unleash himself on the constitutional order. Perhaps this is why, after delivering his first speech to Congress last year, Trump thanked Roberts: gratitude for a Supreme Court that gave him license to act as sovereign.

The American public, then, is left not with a president but with a man who imagines himself master and behaves like a tyrant. A man whose agents brutalize ordinary citizens and then defames them in the wake of their deaths; who has turned the nation’s law enforcement apparatus against his political enemies and who threatens the nation’s allies with military force. A man who takes no interest in the work of government but welcomes corruption and who treats half the country as conquered territory — vassals to abuse as he sees fit.

If the only thing Trump thinks can stop him is his own morality and his own mind, our task — at least for those of us who view the state of things with outrage and anger — is to show him the folly of his words.
 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:


Jamelle Bouie became a New York Times Opinion columnist in 2019. Before that he was the chief political correspondent for Slate magazine. He is based in Charlottesville, Va.


More on Trump and power:


Opinion | Thomas B. Edsall
Trump Unmasked
Jan. 13, 2026

Opinion | Michelle Goldberg
The Resistance Libs Were Right
Jan. 12, 2026

Opinion | David French
Trump Is Unleashing Forces Beyond His Control
Jan. 5, 2026

Opinion | Ezra Klein
The Trump Vibe Shift Is Dead
Dec. 21, 2025