Trump is not the first-ever Republican President with right-wing followers. However, he and his Presidency elicit a visceral response from liberals, both in the United States and abroad. This article in Democracy Journal takes a detailed look at why this happened.
Excerpts:
“What precisely is it about Trump that drives liberals to these cataclysmic views? The answer has to do as much with liberals as with Trump himself. First, there is the nature of liberal ideology itself, whichâbecause of its peculiar characteristics and internal contradictionsâcontributes to the present situation. Second, there are psychological factors, the dispositional tendencies of those who are drawn to liberal ideology. These two elements are related because there is a close and reciprocal connectionâwhat Max Weber called an âelective affinityââbetween psychological needs on one hand and the philosophical contents of an ideology on the other.”
“A mad social scientist could not have devised a character who is more antithetical to the liberal worldview than Donald Trumpâeven a staunch conservative with a more disciplined commitment to right-wing ideals. Trump is unique in his ability to provoke, upset, and irritate those with liberal sensibilities. No doubt this is part of his appeal to a certain segment of the populationâthe ones who have been told since Nixon that âliberal elitesâ were laughing at them.”
We are now equipped to answer the question: Why does Trumpâeven more than other conservativesâmake liberal brains go haywire? It is because he makes it impossible, in practice, for liberals to be tolerant (egalitarian), rational, and optimistic about human natureâthree things that are essential aspects of liberal ideology and liberal psychology. Trump makes it preposterous, in other words, for liberals to be âliberalâ in the usual sense.
Like a spoiled, spiteful, indifferent king, he makes no pretense of listening to or representing usâhalf the nationâin any way. In this respect, he is worseâmore personally contemptuous of liberal norms, traditions, and accomplishmentsâthan Nixon, Reagan, and Bush. If Trump were more religious he would resemble a pre-Enlightenment figure; it would be difficult to find a less scientifically informed member of the upper class. And yet the whole country, it seems, is held hostage to his narcissistic wounds, authoritarian rants, and Twitterstorms.
“In a preface to The Mass Psychology of Fascism, Wilhelm Reich wrote that ââfascismâ is only the organized political expression of the structure of the average manâs character.â The fact that authoritarian inclinations are so mundane and quotidian means that they are a constant dangerâand a constant source of anxiety for the liberal. It would be foolish at this historical moment to suggest that fascism has come to America. It has not. But to many of us, it feels as if we are closer to it than we ever thought possible.”




