Trump joins Putin, Xi and Modi as the ‘four horsemen’ of global authoritarianism
Donald Trump’s return has normalised and supercharged authoritarianism internationally, making it the rule rather than the exception.
Chris Ogden, Associate Professor in Global Studies, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata Rau
26 November 2024
The election of Donald Trump for his second presidential term has led to widespread fears of an imminent authoritarian descent in the United States.
Quite how that might play out remains speculative, for now at least. But evidence from Trump’s first term, as well as his campaign policies and cabinet nominations since the election, suggest those fears are not without foundation.
Another way of looking at this, however, is that Trump’s return simply echoes realities within the international system’s other great powers – China, Russia and India have all displayed similar political pathologies for some time now.
Due to their collective power and influence in determining the nature of the world order, Trump’s victory thus marks the amplification of a deeply autocratic era in global politics.
The hallmarks of what we might call this nascent “Pax Autocratica” can be seen in a variety of ways, as these four horsemen of authoritarianism charge ahead with their policies and plans.
Strongman politics
Donald Trump and his counterparts – China’s Xi Jinping, Russia’s Vladimir Putin and India’s Narendra Modi – are all bombastic, divisive and confrontational leaders. They embody the archetype of strongman politics whereby power is focused on a single, would-be omnipotent individual.
Reports after Trump’s victory suggest he also wants to punish or suppress protest and dissent. The growing politicisation of the US Supreme Court matches similar trends in the other three countries.
This has been likened to a shift away from the rule of law (which underpins a free and open society) towards “rule by law” (whereby the law becomes a tool of control).
The first Trump administration actively discriminated against minority ethnic groups, LGBTQ people, those with disabilities, and immigrants.
Trump’s 2017 travel ban closed the US border to Muslims, while the planned deportation of up to 13 million illegal migrants was a mainstay of his 2024 campaign.
In Russia, attacks against minorities and foreigners are commonplace, with racism in the country described as “out of control” by Amnesty International. Since 2014, violence and discrimination against India’s 200 million Muslims has significantly increased under Modi’s Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP).
While ostensibly democratic, there are glaring weaknesses in the US, Indian and Russian political and electoral systems, which undercut claims of electoral equality, fairness and plurality.
All of these authoritarian trends are underpinned by modern surveillance structures, directed inward towards a country’s own citizens as much as outwards, and enabled by Big Tech and now AI.
In the US, whistleblower Edward Snowden revealed the mass surveillance of telephone records in 2013, which was found to be illegal in 2020. Now, Trump’s alliance with Elon Musk has potential implications for his administration’s approach to AI and national security – including Musk continuing to use his social media platform to boost Trump’s political support.
Trump’s return has normalised and supercharged authoritarianism internationally, making it the rule rather than the exception. America’s autocratic drift is now part of a broader global pattern, one that threatens democratic forces everywhere.
Chris Ogden is affiliated with the Foreign Policy Centre (London) as a Senior Research Fellow.
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license.