Most people probably have a general feeling that the Trump administration has been gradually rolling back democracy in the United States over the last year or more. Such a thing is hard to quantify, but some people have been doing just that: quantifying how much democracy has been dismantled in the US under Trump 2.0.
No fewer than three separate reports published this month indicate that democracy in the USA has been eroded at record speed under Trump. The Swedish V-Dem institute shows the US falling from 20th to 51st position out of 179 in the global democracy rankings, leaving it somewhere between Slovakia and Greece. The Bright Line Watch now puts America's political system about midway between liberal democracy and dictatorship. And the US-based democracy think-tank Freedom House concludes that three countries, USA, Bulgaria and Italy, have recorded the sharpest declines in political rights and civil liberties last year.
Among the evidence: the administration's concentration of power, the undermining of checks and balances on executive power, the overstepping of laws, the circumvention of Congress, the regular attacks on news media and freedom of speech, the erosion of the country's democratic standing overseas, and the absence of criticism of (and even support for) democratic declines abroad.
It is, as V-Dem's founding director says, "The most rapid decline ever in the history of the United States and one of the most rapid in the world. He says that the Trump administration has rolled back democracy as much in one year as Modi in India and Erdogan in Turkey managed in ten years, and as much as Orbán in Hungary did in four.
In the dismissive style typical of the whole Trump administration, a White House spokesperson dismissed this as "a ridiculous claim made by an irrelevant, blatantly biased organization", calling Trump a champion for freedom and democracy and the most transparent and accessible president ever. How do these people live with themselves?
These democracy monitors note, though, that the US has not yet passed the point of no return, and that the Trump effect is not necessarily permanent. Another presidential election in less than three years time, and even the upcoming mid-term elections later this year, could put substantial limits on Trump's slide towards authoritarianism. Gods, let's hope so!