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Trump’s moves compared to those of strongmen
Los Angeles Times
|September 30, 2025
Analysts see similar efforts to consolidate power and punish foes in faded democracies.

PRESIDENT Trump greets Turkey's Recep Erdogan, who has jailed writers and a potential rival, last week.
(ALEX WONG Getty Images)
In 2007, eight years after becoming Venezuela's president, Hugo Chavez revoked the license of the country’s oldest private television station. Eight months into his second term, President Trump suggested revoking the licenses of U.S. television stations he believes are overly critical of him.
Since he returned to office in January, Trump’s remaking of the federal government into an instrument of his personal will has drawn comparisons _ to elected strongmen in other countries who used the levers of government to consolidate power, punish their enemies and stifle dissent.
But those familiar with other countries where that has happened, including Hungary and Turkey, say there is one striking difference: Trump appears to be moving more rapidly, and more overtly, than others did.
“The only difference is the speed with which it is happening,” said David Smilde, who lived in Venezuela during Chavez's rise and is now a professor at Tulane University.
The U.S. is a long way from Venezuela or other authoritarian governments. It still has robust opposition to Trump, judges who often check his initiatives and a system that diffuses power across 50 states, including elections, making it hard for a president to dominate the country. Some of Trump's most controversial pledges, such as revoking television licenses, remain just threats.
Trump has both scoffed and winked at the allegation that he’s an authoritarian.
During last year’s campaign, he said he wouldn't be a “dictator” — except, he added, “on day one” over the border. Last month, Trump told reporters: "A lot of people are saying, ‘Maybe we like a dictator.’ I don’t like a dictator. I'm nota dictator.”
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