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Adam Bodnar, Poland’s new justice minister, recently explained to me the immense challenge of rebuilding liberal democracy in his country after an eight-year slide toward authoritarianism. Imagine, he said, that Donald Trump had won the last election and been in power for two terms instead of one. Poland is a country that has just gone through something like what Trumpists hope to impose on us in a second term. And now it’s trying to repair itself, which is why I flew there last month. The parallels to the backlash against the American Supreme Court’s decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, which overturned Roe v. Wade, were impossible to miss.
Persons: Adam Bodnar, Donald Trump, Trump, Biden, MAGA, , Roe, Wade, that’s, Daniel Ziblatt, Organizations: Jackson, Health Organization Locations: Poland, American, Dobbs v, Warsaw, America
As the parties have grown racially, religiously, and socially distant from one another, a new kind of social discord has been growing. The increasing political divide has allowed political, public, electoral, and national norms to be broken with little to no consequence. Institutions that empower partisan minorities can become instruments of minority rule. And they are especially dangerous when they are in the hands of extremist or antidemocratic partisan minorities. Its political system spreads power out very broadly, in ways that give many individual players the power to stop things.
Persons: Lilliana Mason, Johns Hopkins, Trump, , Steven Levitsky, Daniel Ziblatt, “ Vetocracy, ” Francis Fukuyama, Stanford’s, Fukuyama, ” Fukuyama Organizations: American, Harvard, Constitution, Global, Politics Today, Stanford’s Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, House Republicans Locations: America, U.S
Opinion | The Straitjacket of Minority Rule
  + stars: | 2023-09-11 | by ( Michelle Goldberg | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +2 min
One of the most influential books of the Trump years was “How Democracies Die” by the Harvard government professors Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt. Because that volume was prescient about how Donald Trump would try to rule, I was surprised to learn, in Levitsky and Ziblatt’s new book, “Tyranny of the Minority,” that they were shocked by Jan. 6. But at the time, he said, “we didn’t consider or call the Republican Party an authoritarian party. “Societal diversity, cultural backlash and extreme-right parties are ubiquitous across established Western democracies,” they write. And only in America is the coup leader likely to once again be the nominee of a major party.
Persons: Trump, Steven Levitsky, Daniel Ziblatt, , Donald Trump, Jan, they’ve, Levitsky, , Ziblatt Organizations: Harvard, Republican Party Locations: United States, Levitsky, America
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