
Donald Trump’s grand displays of power may actually show how weak he really is, pundit argues
Political commentator Thom Hartmann has implored the American people to see through Donald Trump’s attempted displays of strength. “Don’t believe it,” Hartmann warned in a recent op-ed.
All of the grandstanding, Hartmann explained—from the blatant disregard for the law to his attempts to distract from the flailing economy to his utilization of the military against American citizens—is “precisely because he’s so extraordinarily weak.”
He then compared the president to other strongman leaders, stating, “None were as weak as Trump is today when they succeeded in consolidating enough power to eliminate their challengers and lock down the populace.” Hartmann pointed out that those who destroyed democracy in their countries—such as Vladimir Putin, Viktor Orbán, Benito Mussolini, and Adolf Hitler—had extremely high approval ratings as they rose to prominence. They also addressed certain national crises on their way to absolute power.
For example, Hitler created “massive public works and social welfare programs” that helped drastically reduce unemployment.
But Trump’s approval ratings are dismal, Hartmann said. “He didn’t even break 50 percent of the popular vote in 2024, and lost the popular vote in 2016.”
As of October 20, 2025, 44.2 percent approved of his presidency, while 52.1 percent disapproved, according to Nate Silver’s Silver Bulletin. The RealClearPolitics average places him around 45 percent, and Gallup finds 40 percent—making him one of the least popular U.S. presidents at this stage in history.
Hartmann re-emphasized that, “unlike his predecessors or authoritarians in other countries that lost their democracies, his base remains intense but small; there’s no evidence of majoritarian enthusiasm existing outside of his core partisan bloc.”
Even more telling, Republicans who defy Trump tend to see their popularity rise. “Fear, it turns out, is the cement that’s holding the GOP together under Trump,” he said.
Trump has made it clear he will punish his enemies and reward his admirers. So far, Hartmann said, that tactic is working to keep his party in line. But maintaining power through fear “is a dangerous game,” and “politicians like Trump eventually find themselves trapped by the very fear they’ve used to paralyze their party members into compliance or silence.”
His scramble for power and the intensity of his actions in the first year of his presidency prove that he “knows he only has a short window before the country truly fights back against his strongman attempts to turn America into a third-world tinpot dictatorship.”
Despite these challenges, Hartmann expressed optimism that Trump will be among the 75% of wannabe dictators whose attempts to destroy democracy in wealthy nations fail.
“So, take heart,” he concluded. “The No Kings marches proved both Trump’s widespread unpopularity and the fearlessness of an American public echoing over two centuries of our nation standing up to tinpot despots and wannabe dictators.”
“We Americans have never tolerated a king or a dictator, and we’re not about to start now.”
https://www.lgbtqnation.com/2025/10/donald-trumps-grand-displays-of-power-may-actually-show-how-weak-he-really-is-pundit-argues/
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