The Trump Dictatorship Is Cracking Up
Source: The New Republic · Bias: Left
Summary
Almost without exception, those who enjoy the great honor of serving President Donald Trump have ultimately collided with two all-consuming dictums. The first is that Trump’s underlings must always elevate his personal interests above those of the institutions they run. The second is that they will always fall short of honoring the first, incurring his inevitable wrath.Two big events late Thursday—Trump’s firing of Attorney General Pam Bondi, and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s axing of a top military official—demonstrate the deep perils of what political theorists refer to as “personalist” rule. This mode places one charismatic leader’s vainglory and self-enrichment, unbound by procedural neutrality, at the center of all decisionmaking. Flattery, tribute, attunement to the Big Man’s ever-shifting whims, and the effective humiliation of his enemies are what secure one’s place in the highest circles of glory.The president’s banishment of Bondi tightly followed this template. An illuminating tick-tock from The Wall Street Journal tells us that Trump was “incensed” at her failure to prosecute his enemies, and her inability to bury the Jeffrey Epstein files left him “frustrated.” In both cases, Bondi deeply corrupted the institution she purported to serve in a fruitless effort to please Trump. For instance, in bringing cases against numerous Trump foes—including Democratic senators like Adam Schiff and Mark Kelly, among others—her handpicked prosecutors twisted the law and Justice Department protocols so badly that the efforts buffoonishly fell apart while prompting resignations from career officials.The Journal reports that after Trump berated Bondi in a Truth Social post that he reportedly intended to send privately, she grew upset and called top White House officials. Surely Bondi protested that she was trying very hard to be corrupt on Trump’s behalf, but he was demanding the unachievable: prosecutions untethered from law or fact. No matter: The absurdity of Trump’s demands could not be the problem. Only the failure to meet them could be.Similarly, on Epstein, Bondi argued internally for keeping many of the files buried, per the Journal. That’s also a corrupt act. Yet Trump blamed her for failing to keep the story out of the news, even though his own stonewalling—and the presence of his name all over the files—were the real reasons for the unflagging media attention. Here again Bondi was cast from grace after deeply corrupting the institution she served but failing to achieve an impossible Trumpian demand—erasure of the unalterable record of his deep entanglement with Epstein. The crowning humiliation: As the end grew near, Bondi flattered Trump in self-debasing ways and performatively dressed down Trump enemies in public to assuage the Audience of One. None of it could save her.Hegseth’s firing of a top Pentagon official also follows elements of the “personalist” pattern. The New York Times reports that Hegseth removed Gen. Randy George, the chief of staff of the Army, angering many senior officials. George and his allies clashed with Hegseth over the latter’s controversial derailment of the promotion of four officers—two black and two women—potentially due to their race and gender. Hoping to resolve the situation, George asked for a meeting with Hegseth, but it was refused.Hegseth has fired numerous other top military officials, which Representative Adam Smith, the ranking Democrat on the House Armed Services Committee, describes as an unprecedented purge. “No secretary of defense has ever fired this many high-ranking senior people in his first year on the job,” Smith told me.Most officials believed George had been doing a good job in modernizing the military in various ways, the congressman said, but George seems to have fallen victim to a “personality clash” with Hegseth. “It seems like Hegseth got into a pissing match with him over blocking promotions,” Smith said, adding that this is “undermining confidence in leadership” right “in the middle of the Iran war fiasco,” which “makes it worse.”These are all glaring leadership abuses and failures. Yet Hegseth is well-suited to surviving them—because he knows how to navigate Trump’s personalist rule. Hegseth is intensely loyal to Trump, and his willingness to bend or break laws to humor Trump’s whims is unquestioned. After Trump threatened during this week’s prime-time speech to vault Iran “back to the stone ages,” Hegseth obsequiously repeated Trump’s language, tweeting: “Back to the stone age.”In short, Hegseth will gleefully carry out war crimes at Trump’s direction.
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Daily Analysis
Read the full Parallax Pulse for April 3, 2026 — an AI-powered analysis of how Left and Right media covered the biggest stories this day.
More Headlines From April 3, 2026
- Who is Christopher LaNeve, set to lead the US army? (Center)
- White House calls reports of Gabbard’s impending ouster ‘fake news’ (Center)
- Trump threatens to break NATO's promise over Iran war (Center Left)
- US Allies Work on Plan B for Hormuz Strait If Trump Walks Away (Center)
- Hegseth says he will let troops take personal firearms onto military bases (Center)





