EPISODE · Jun 10, 2026 · 51 MIN
Trump’s Dictator Playbook, with Ruth Ben-Ghiat
from The Hot Dish · host The One Country Project
Buckle up, history buffs and democracy defenders. We're sitting down with Ruth Ben-Ghiat, professor of history and Italian studies at New York University, author of Strongman, and one of the leading experts on authoritarianism, to connect the dots between today's political chaos and the playbooks of history's most dangerous leaders. The parallels are less "ancient history" and more "this week's headlines," and Ruth is here to decode every one of them.Heidi and Joel also unpack the shifting electoral map, with a look at Senate battlegrounds, emerging gubernatorial contests, and what the current political climate means for voters heading into the next cycle.In this episode:How today's administration mirrors the tactics of historic autocratsThe anatomy of a cult of personality, and how they're builtThe "only I can do it" syndrome and why it resonatesThe TINA trap: why "There Is No Alternative" is so dangerousWhat the bunker mentality reveals about autocratic fearReligion, symbols, and grievance as tools of authoritarian powerThe warning signs of democratic erosion, and how fast it movesWhy American resilience may be the one thing autocrats can't plan forConnect with Ruth Ben-Ghiat on: Twitter Substack: LucidThe playbook for autocracy isn't buried in history books; it's playing out in real time. Tune in, get informed, and maybe think twice before you call this just another political phase.The Hot Dish is brought to you by the One Country Project. To learn more, visit OneCountryProject.org, or find us on Substack (Onecountryproject.substack.com), and on YouTube, Bluesky, and Facebook (@onecountryproject). (00:00) - Introduction to Ruth Ben-Ghiat's expertise on authoritarianism (00:01) - The unique and dangerous nature of today’s political threats (00:23) - How Trump’s demagoguery compares to Mussolini and fascist archetypes (00:35) - The impact of social progress and backlash, race, gender, and democracy (00:26) - The trajectory toward an ethno-state and the exploitation of wealth (00:46) - How policies are weaponized to transfer wealth and create division (00:28) - The challenge of former loyalists re-entering politics amid autocratic influence (00:46) - The rapid speed of autocratic consolidation—Hungary, Russia, and beyond (00:39) - The uncharted and disturbing destruction of public health and welfare (00:19) - The cult of personality, authoritarian playbook, and Trump’s messaging (00:57) - The autocratic “no alternative” syndrome and potential successors (00:38) - The fears and vulnerabilities of autocrats like Trump—hidden bunker fears (00:46) - How autocrats boast confidence but tremble behind the scenes (00:13) - The risks of loyalists and whether they can escape the grip of the cult (00:42) - The changing landscape of election rules and the future of democracy (00:52) - The costly mistake of intervening in foreign conflicts (00:24) - The lasting legacy—how Trump’s era might be remembered forever
What this episode covers
Buckle up, history buffs and democracy defenders. We're sitting down with Ruth Ben-Ghiat, professor of history and Italian studies at New York University, author of Strongman, and one of the leading experts on authoritarianism, to connect the dots between today's political chaos and the playbooks of history's most dangerous leaders. The parallels are less "ancient history" and more "this week's headlines," and Ruth is here to decode every one of them.Heidi and Joel also unpack the shifting electoral map, with a look at Senate battlegrounds, emerging gubernatorial contests, and what the current political climate means for voters heading into the next cycle.In this episode:How today's administration mirrors the tactics of historic autocratsThe anatomy of a cult of personality, and how they're builtThe "only I can do it" syndrome and why it resonatesThe TINA trap: why "There Is No Alternative" is so dangerousWhat the bunker mentality reveals about autocratic fearReligion, symbols, and grievance as tools of authoritarian powerThe warning signs of democratic erosion, and how fast it movesWhy American resilience may be the one thing autocrats can't plan forConnect with Ruth Ben-Ghiat on: Twitter Substack: LucidThe playbook for autocracy isn't buried in history books; it's playing out in real time. Tune in, get informed, and maybe think twice before you call this just another political phase.The Hot Dish is brought to you by the One Country Project. To learn more, visit OneCountryProject.org, or find us on Substack (Onecountryproject.substack.com), and on YouTube, Bluesky, and Facebook (@onecountryproject). (00:00) - Introduction to Ruth Ben-Ghiat's expertise on authoritarianism (00:01) - The unique and dangerous nature of today’s political threats (00:23) - How Trump’s demagoguery compares to Mussolini and fascist archetypes (00:35) - The impact of social progress and backlash, race, gender, and democracy (00:26) - The trajectory toward an ethno-state and the exploitation of wealth (00:46) - How policies are weaponized to transfer wealth and create division (00:28) - The challenge of former loyalists re-entering politics amid autocratic influence (00:46) - The rapid speed of autocratic consolidation—Hungary, Russia, and beyond (00:39) - The uncharted and disturbing destruction of public health and welfare (00:19) - The cult of personality, authoritarian playbook, and Trump’s messaging (00:57) - The autocratic “no alternative” syndrome and potential successors (00:38) - The fears and vulnerabilities of autocrats like Trump—hidden bunker fears (00:46) - How autocrats boast confidence but tremble behind the scenes (00:13) - The risks of loyalists and whether they can escape the grip of the cult (00:42) - The changing landscape of election rules and the future of democracy (00:52) - The costly mistake of intervening in foreign conflicts (00:24) - The lasting legacy—how Trump’s era might be remembered forever
NOW PLAYING
Trump’s Dictator Playbook, with Ruth Ben-Ghiat
No transcript for this episode yet
Similar Episodes
Mar 26, 2026 ·1m
Mar 19, 2026 ·34m
Feb 18, 2026 ·11m
Feb 11, 2026 ·45m