The ex-president recently hosted the Hungarian kleptocrat, whom heās called a āstrong manā and a real ābossā, at Mar-a-Lago
Donald Trump has not only run the Republican primaries like an incumbent, but on occasion, he gets to play-act the role of president right at home. On Friday, he hosted Viktor OrbĆ”n, the Hungarian prime minister, for a quasi-state visit at his Mar-a-Lago estate, described by discerning critics as āthe palace of a CEO-president-king, done up in the opulent dictator-chic favored by third-world kleptocratsā.
OrbĆ”n has spent the past 14 years making his country into a kleptocratic autocracy right in the middle of the European Union. Obviously, Trump does not need general guidance from OrbĆ”n; he is already endowed with authoritarian instincts. But, for all the obvious differences between OrbĆ”nās small European nation and the US, OrbĆ”nās rule holds concrete lessons which the American right is ready to adopt. Given the excitement with which Trump acolytes have been promoting OrbĆ”n ā and their frequent pilgrimages to Budapest as the capital of ānational conservatismā ā Hungary offers a preview of a second Trump term.
Lesson number one: if you want to control the country, you must completely control your own party. After losing two successive national elections at the beginning of this century, it looked like OrbĆ”nās career might be finished. Instead, he managed to govern his Fidesz party with an iron grip. It is not an accident that far-right populist leaders everywhere treat their parties as personal vehicles, with no real internal debates, let alone dissent, tolerated.
Trump saying āIām going to be a dictatorā hints at what another term would look like.