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{{Infobox politician|name=Donald Trump|caption=Official portrait of Trump in 2025.|birth_name=Donald John Trump|birth_date=June 14, 1946|birth_place=Queens, New York City, United States|nationality=[[United States of America|US American]]|political_orientation=[[Reaction|Ultra-reactionism]]<br>[[Right-wing populism]]<br>[[Imperialism]]<br>[[Anti-communism]]|political_party=[[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]|image=Trump_Second_Inauguration_Portrait_2025.jpg}}
{{Infobox politician|name=Donald Trump|caption=Official portrait of Trump in 2025.|birth_name=Donald John Trump|birth_date=June 14, 1946|birth_place=Queens, New York City, United States|nationality=[[United States of America|US American]]|political_orientation=[[Reaction|Ultra-reactionism]]<br>[[Right-wing populism]]<br>[[Imperialism]]<br>[[Anti-communism]]|political_party=[[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]]|image=Trump_Second_Inauguration_Portrait_2025.jpg}}
'''Donald Trump''' (born June 14, 1946) is a [[Rightism|far-right]] [[United States of America|American]] media personality, politician, rapist, convicted felon, and [[Bourgeoisie|billionaire]] who served as president of the United States from 2017 to 2021 and 2025 onward.<ref name=":1">Barry Grey (May 31, 2024). [https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2024/06/01/bxnz-j01.html ''"Trump’s conviction in New York and the 2024 crisis election"'']. ''World Socialist Web Site''. Retrieved June 1, 2024.</ref> While Trump is not a [[Fascism|fascist]] in the [[Marxism|Marxist]] sense, his leadership marks the severe weakening of [[bourgeois democracy]] and reactionization of the US American state. His second presidency in particular saw the widespread use of [[Terrorism|terroristic]] means to repress ethnic minorities and other marginalized segments of the population.<ref>[https://theworker.news/2025/04/02/is-trump-a-fascist/ "Is Trump a Fascist?"] (April 2, 2025). ''The Worker''. Retrieved December 18, 2025.</ref>
'''Donald Trump''' (born June 14, 1946) is a [[Rightism|far-right]] [[United States of America|American]] media personality, politician, rapist, convicted felon, and [[Bourgeoisie|billionaire]] who served as president of the United States from 2017 to 2021 and 2025 onward.<ref name=":1">Barry Grey (May 31, 2024). [https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2024/06/01/bxnz-j01.html ''"Trump’s conviction in New York and the 2024 crisis election"'']. ''World Socialist Web Site''. Retrieved June 1, 2024.</ref> While Trump is not a [[Fascism|fascist]] in the [[Marxism|Marxist]] sense, his leadership marks the severe weakening of [[bourgeois democracy]] and reactionization of the US American state. His second presidency in particular saw the widespread use of [[Terrorism|terroristic]] means to repress ethnic minorities and other marginalized segments of the population.<ref name="istrumpafascist">[https://theworker.news/2025/04/02/is-trump-a-fascist/ "Is Trump a Fascist?"] (April 2, 2025). ''The Worker''. Retrieved December 18, 2025.</ref>
==First presidency==
==First presidency==
{{Main|First presidency of Donald Trump}}
{{Main|First presidency of Donald Trump}}
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===Second term===
===Second term===
During Trump's second term, he held a far more jingoistic foreign policy, threatening to annex nearby countries and invade others such as [[Venezuela]]. During the so-called "[[12 day war]]" in 2025, Trump joined the [[Israeli]] war against [[Iran]] by bombing multiple sites alleged to be related to Iran's nuclear program.
During Trump's second term, he held a far more jingoistic foreign policy, threatening to annex nearby countries and invade others such as [[Venezuela]]. During the so-called "[[12 day war]]" in 2025, Trump joined the [[Israeli]] war against [[Iran]] by bombing multiple sites alleged to be related to Iran's nuclear program.
In January 2026, Trump launched an attempt to coup the Venezuelan government and de-facto annex the country, [[2026 United States attack on Venezuela and capture of Nicolas Maduro|capturing]] the Venezuelan president and his wife.


==Analysis==
==Analysis==
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The median household income of the Trump electorate was a relatively high income rather than a relatively low one. The median household income of the Trump electorate was $72,000/year, 12% higher than the overall national median household income of about $57,600 a year.<ref>[https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/the-mythology-of-trumps-working-class-support/ The Mythology Of Trump’s ‘Working Class’ Support, by Nate Silver]</ref><ref>[https://www.census.gov/content/dam/Census/library/publications/2017/acs/acsbr16-02.pdf Household Income: 2016, by Gloria G. Guzman]</ref>
The median household income of the Trump electorate was a relatively high income rather than a relatively low one. The median household income of the Trump electorate was $72,000/year, 12% higher than the overall national median household income of about $57,600 a year.<ref>[https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/the-mythology-of-trumps-working-class-support/ The Mythology Of Trump’s ‘Working Class’ Support, by Nate Silver]</ref><ref>[https://www.census.gov/content/dam/Census/library/publications/2017/acs/acsbr16-02.pdf Household Income: 2016, by Gloria G. Guzman]</ref>


=== Mobilization of the Lumpenproletariat===
=== Relationship to fascism ===
[[File:Fascism Worship (27686095712).jpg|right|thumb|A Trump supporter kneeling in Tucson, Arizona.]]
Donald Trump has been widely characterized as a fascist or [[Neo-fascism|neo-fascist]] by many on the [[Leftism|left]] and even among leading bourgeois politicians in the Democratic Party. However, this understanding a fascism relies on an incomplete or unscientific understanding of fascism. Donald Trump cannot be considered a fascist because the merging of state and corporate functions has not yet taken place under his regime, the state does not direct corporations, and besides all of this there exists no mature socialist threat to warrant a transition into fascism from bourgeois democracy as was seen in [[European]] fascist states. Instead, Trump is an ultra-reactionary and his regime represents extreme ''reactionization''.<ref name="istrumpafascist"></ref>
 
=== Mobilization of the Lumpenproletariat ===


==== Clyde Barrow ====
==== Clyde Barrow ====
Line 70: Line 76:


=== Influence on American politics ===
=== Influence on American politics ===
{{See also|Trumpism}}
Both in and out of office, Donald Trump has had a significant influence on the political culture, social discourse, media industry, two-party dynamic, [[conspiracy theories]], and political [[consciousness]] of the United States. His presidency has been considered a turning point in the history of the Republican Party, from adherence towards [[neoliberal]] bourgeois democracy to increasingly [[Neo-fascism|fascistic]] and authoritarian positions. In the months before and after the 2020 general election, support for previously fringe far-right positions, including conspiracy theories, increased drastically among the Trump electorate and, to some extent, the general population, with the [[antisemitic]] [[QAnon]] movement at the forefront of this trend.<ref name=":0">''[https://icsr.info/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/ICSR-Report-Far-From-Gone-The-Evolution-of-Extremism-in-the-First-100-Days-of-the-Biden-Administration.pdf Far From Gone: The Evolution of Extremism in the First 100 Days of the Biden Administration]'' Marc-André Argentino, Blyth Crawford, Florence Keen, Hannah Rose (2021) International Centre for the Study and Radicalisation</ref> Belief that the election had been fraudulent also increased.<ref name=":0" />  
Both in and out of office, Donald Trump has had a significant influence on the political culture, social discourse, media industry, two-party dynamic, [[conspiracy theories]], and political [[consciousness]] of the United States. His presidency has been considered a turning point in the history of the Republican Party, from adherence towards [[neoliberal]] bourgeois democracy to increasingly [[Neo-fascism|fascistic]] and authoritarian positions. In the months before and after the 2020 general election, support for previously fringe far-right positions, including conspiracy theories, increased drastically among the Trump electorate and, to some extent, the general population, with the [[antisemitic]] [[QAnon]] movement at the forefront of this trend.<ref name=":0">''[https://icsr.info/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/ICSR-Report-Far-From-Gone-The-Evolution-of-Extremism-in-the-First-100-Days-of-the-Biden-Administration.pdf Far From Gone: The Evolution of Extremism in the First 100 Days of the Biden Administration]'' Marc-André Argentino, Blyth Crawford, Florence Keen, Hannah Rose (2021) International Centre for the Study and Radicalisation</ref> Belief that the election had been fraudulent also increased.<ref name=":0" />  



Latest revision as of 19:39, 3 January 2026

Donald Trump

Official portrait of Trump in 2025.
Born
Donald John Trump

June 14, 1946
Queens, New York City, United States
Nationality US American
Ideology Ultra-reactionism
Right-wing populism
Imperialism
Anti-communism
Political party Republican

Donald Trump (born June 14, 1946) is a far-right American media personality, politician, rapist, convicted felon, and billionaire who served as president of the United States from 2017 to 2021 and 2025 onward.[1] While Trump is not a fascist in the Marxist sense, his leadership marks the severe weakening of bourgeois democracy and reactionization of the US American state. His second presidency in particular saw the widespread use of terroristic means to repress ethnic minorities and other marginalized segments of the population.[2]

First presidency

Political style and ideology

Before, during, and after his presidency, Trump's speaking style was defined by self-deprecation, insult comedy, appeal to cruel law and order, and a framing of America as in decline. Trump offered himself as a cult figure opposed to entrenched Washington bureaucrats, and said he was the only person who could fix American decline. Trump's nominal focus on stopping the offshoring of manufacturing led a former professor of business, Matthew DeBord, to label Trump a 'heavy metal socialist' in Business Insider.[3]

Trump had initial, famous support from prominent American national socialists, including NPI president Richard Spencer. This support among the national socialist think tanks withered as Trump's term came to be increasingly defined by lawlessness. Additionally, a small segment of the national-socialist sympathetic right, including Richard Spencer, were financially targeted during or shortly after Trump's presidency.

Most of the American mainstream media portrays Trump as an egomaniac rather than a representative of any particular ideology.

Appointments

Cabinet

Federal agencies

Donald Trump made infamous appointments to several agencies, such as the Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of Education.

Public image

Bills passed as president

As president, Trump mostly continued unpopular policy directions of Obama, including removing Obama's own safeguards on his own unpopular policy directions. This meant Trump continued to make the internet a vehicle for mass surveillance, aimed his policies to favor 'the swamp' (with the exception of a single, merely advisory executive order), and furthered policy that was hostile to non-government workers.

More specifically, Trump rolled back regulation aimed at energy firms, increased protections for federal workers, favored state government employees over civilians in retirement plans, prolonged the war against ISIS, improved weather warnings, allowed internet providers to share more civilian data, and decreased worker safety protections.[4]

Like previous presidents, virtually all Trumps enacted policies were niche and were not particularly impactful, and he was the most impactful in his inaction.

Executive orders

Trump's executive orders were mostly ceremonial, temporary, or advisory in nature, but were more in line with his campaign promises than the bills he passed. His more ambitious executive orders did not last long. For example, he signed an executive order instituting a travel ban for citizens of Islamic countries entering the USA. However, this travel ban only lasted 90 days. Additionally, an executive order to finish construction of the US-Mexico border wall mostly went nowhere, as the wall was not sufficiently funded by either Trump or Republicans, and thus will likely never be finished.

One of Trump's more material executive orders was withdrawing the US from an Obama-era international trade agreement called the Trans-Pacific Partnership. This trade agreement was previously mostly criticized by populists in the American left for restricting the ability for governments to regulate corporate abuses.[5] Trump then tried to re-enter the agreement under unspecified terms, but was rejected by the member states.

Trump was vague about his reasons for initially withdrawing from the partnership but wanted to be seen as an anti-Obama politician to his supporters.

Second presidency

Trump's second inauguration in 2025 was joined by multiple billionaires and other powerful individuals.[6]

Political rhetoric

By Trump's second term as president, he made increasingly chauvinistic statements targeting marginalized groups, relying on white supremacist logic. He claimed that undocumented immigrants were "poisoning the blood of our country" and had "bad genes", echoing Nazi rhetoric of "racial hygiene". He claimed that his political adversaries were "vermin".[7]

Appointments

As was the case during his previous term, Trump made many controversial appointments. Among these was his appointment of anti-vaccine figure Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as Secretary of Health and Human Services on February 13, 2025. Days before the 2024 presidential election, Trump stated RFK Jr. would wield a "a big role in health care."[8]

Repression

On September 22, 2025, Trump signed an executive order intended to designate "antifa", a loose grouping of anti-fascist activists, as a domestic terrorist organization, further enabling repression by the state. The executive order also allows Federal authorities to act against anyone "claiming to act on behalf of Antifa, or for which Antifa or any person claiming to act on behalf of Antifa provided material support." This move was believed to be motivated by the killing of Charlie Kirk.[9]

In a presidential memorandum released on September 25 entitled “Countering Domestic Terrorism and Organized Political Violence”, "anti-Americanism, anti-capitalism, and anti-Christianity" are associated with political violence and therefore subject to targeting by the government.[10]

Foreign policy

First term

Trump adopted a foreign policy toward Russia that was slightly more dovish than some of his Democratic counterparts. Trump was favored by the Russian government to win the election over Hillary Clinton. Democrats used this fact, along with Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election campaign as a scapegoat for their electoral failures. The famous American left-libertarian Noam Chomsky partially commended Trump's stance on Russia, highlighting the dangers of the Democratic Party's past role in inflaming Cold War tensions and further nuclear threats.

Trump briefly wanted to go to war with Iran, but was talked out of it by his allies in the media.

Second term

During Trump's second term, he held a far more jingoistic foreign policy, threatening to annex nearby countries and invade others such as Venezuela. During the so-called "12 day war" in 2025, Trump joined the Israeli war against Iran by bombing multiple sites alleged to be related to Iran's nuclear program.

In January 2026, Trump launched an attempt to coup the Venezuelan government and de-facto annex the country, capturing the Venezuelan president and his wife.

Analysis

Political base

The median household income of the Trump electorate was a relatively high income rather than a relatively low one. The median household income of the Trump electorate was $72,000/year, 12% higher than the overall national median household income of about $57,600 a year.[11][12]

Relationship to fascism

A Trump supporter kneeling in Tucson, Arizona.

Donald Trump has been widely characterized as a fascist or neo-fascist by many on the left and even among leading bourgeois politicians in the Democratic Party. However, this understanding a fascism relies on an incomplete or unscientific understanding of fascism. Donald Trump cannot be considered a fascist because the merging of state and corporate functions has not yet taken place under his regime, the state does not direct corporations, and besides all of this there exists no mature socialist threat to warrant a transition into fascism from bourgeois democracy as was seen in European fascist states. Instead, Trump is an ultra-reactionary and his regime represents extreme reactionization.[2]

Mobilization of the Lumpenproletariat

Clyde Barrow

The American Marxist commentator and political scientist Clyde Barrow painted Trump as a "lumpen-candidate". According to Barrow, Trump has a unique ability to recruit America's unemployed and often criminal class for "in-real-life" electoral support. Barrow compares Trump to Marx's description of Louis Bonaparte in the The Eighteenth Brumaire‎‎ as well as the media's description of Bonaparte's 1848 campaign. Bonaparte‎‎ had a comical, or 'clownish', political style and recruited the Parisian underclass for paramilitary support. According to Barrow, Bonaparte used this support in his campaign against France's working class. Barrow argues that post-industrial capitalism expands the lumpenproletariat, and that Trump is a symptom of this extended pattern.[13]

Barrow also successfully predicted in autumn of 2020 that a large amount of unemployed or gig-working Americans would attempt a coup d'état of the American federal government in favor of Trump. However, some details of his predictions were incorrect: he predicted this would partially mirror how Bonaparte allegedly recruited a paramilitary of 'petite bourgeois peasants' to act as 'shock troops' in the 1848 French election.[14] Moreover, unlike Bonaparte in 1848, Trump in fact lost his re-election bid.

Michael Moore

During the 2016 election, American left-populist political commentator Michael Moore predicted, contrary to the (erroneous) polling data circulating in the media, that Donald Trump had a serious chance of winning due to the frustration of Americans who had been dispossessed by free trade laws and the offshoring of American jobs.[citation needed] However, Moore would later incorrectly predict that Trump's reactionary Supreme Court nominations would provoke a Democratic "blue wave" in the 2022 midterms, instead of the actual, highly indecisive result.

Influence on American politics

Both in and out of office, Donald Trump has had a significant influence on the political culture, social discourse, media industry, two-party dynamic, conspiracy theories, and political consciousness of the United States. His presidency has been considered a turning point in the history of the Republican Party, from adherence towards neoliberal bourgeois democracy to increasingly fascistic and authoritarian positions. In the months before and after the 2020 general election, support for previously fringe far-right positions, including conspiracy theories, increased drastically among the Trump electorate and, to some extent, the general population, with the antisemitic QAnon movement at the forefront of this trend.[15] Belief that the election had been fraudulent also increased.[15]

Most notably, the size and influence of neo-fascist terrorist militias such as the Proud Boys, Oath Keepers, and Three Percenters also grew noticeably.[16]

Democratic Party influence on Trump's victory

As reported by Gabriel Debenedetti among others, Clinton staff, together with the DNC, sought to use the 2016 presidential race to shift the political discussion in the Republican Party further to the right. The goal of this was to reduce the electoral viability of moderate Republican candidates by making their rhetoric more right-leaning. Clinton allies presumably saw moderate Republicans as more electable than the extremist candidates, and possibly thought that by increasing the radicalism of their rhetoric, they could decrease their popular appeal.

This was stated explicitly in an April 2015 memo shared among Clinton staff and the DNC, where they also state they intended to conspire with allies in the press to accomplish their aforementioned goals. This memo read:

The variety of candidates is a positive here, and many of the lesser known can serve as a cudgel to move the more established candidates further to the right. In this scenario, we don’t want to marginalize the more extreme candidates, but make them more ‘Pied Piper’ candidates who actually represent the mainstream of the Republican Party,” read the memo.

Pied Piper candidates include, but aren’t limited to: • Ted Cruz • Donald Trump • Ben Carson

We need to be elevating the Pied Piper candidates so that they are leaders of the pack and tell the press to [take] them seriously.

Clinton aides pushed this further in an agenda item for top aides, which read:

How do we prevent Bush from bettering himself/how do we maximize Trump and others?"

Anti-democratic initiatives

Failed, half-hearted (domestic) coup

Trump lost the popular and electoral votes in 2020 to the Democrat Joe Biden and, as promised, decried the result as "corrupt". This led to a rally held in Washington, DC, by Trump and other far-right Republicans on January 6, 2021, intended to coincide with a joint session of Congress was scheduled to hold the traditional vote-counting ceremony that formalized a presidential election. Trump's rhetoric incited a riot in which his supporters stormed the US Capitol, attacked Capitol police, vandalized the building, with some attempting to stop the election certification process.

Multiple members of the 'Proud Boys' who attended the riot, including Enrique Tarrio, Joseph Biggs, Ethan Nordean and Zachary Rehl, have so far have been convicted of seditious conspiracy for their attempt to stop the election certification process that day and face 20–30 years in prison each.

Hundreds of riot attendees have been convicted with trespassing-related charges, which were not exactly hard to prosecute given the rioters were keep on using selfie-sticks and livestreaming their crimes. At least one attendee, a young attractive white woman named Riley June Williams, was seen trying to direct the rioters. Riley stated that she stole Nancy Pelosis laptop and hard drives and attempted to sell it to unspecified Russians. So far, she has been sentenced to three years in prison.[17]

Other notable convictions from this riot include Stewart Rhodes, who received an 18-year prison sentence for seditious conspiracy related to the failed coup and riot. Stewart is the founder of the Oath Keepers, a group of right-wing militia members.

Peter Schwartz was sentenced to 14 years in prison for attacking police officers present at the riot with pepper spray and a chair. Thomas Webster was sentenced to 10 years in prison for swinging a metal flagpole at police at the event.

A pro-Trump rioter named Ashli Babbit was shot and killed at the riot by law enforcement for barging past a barricade erected to protect Congress members from the riot, and after warned not to pass the barricade. The law enforcement officer was cleared of any possible wrongdoing.

Attempt to overturn the 2020 election results in Georgia

After year 2020 votes for president were cast in Georgia, Trump tried to overturn the election in Georgia through lobbying the Georgia legislature to create a fake slate of electors for him, harassing a poll worker to falsely admit to election fraud, and personally pressuring the Georgia governor to manufacture over 11 thousand additional votes for him in a long private phone call.

See also

References

  1. Barry Grey (May 31, 2024). "Trump’s conviction in New York and the 2024 crisis election". World Socialist Web Site. Retrieved June 1, 2024.
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Is Trump a Fascist?" (April 2, 2025). The Worker. Retrieved December 18, 2025.
  3. 'Trump's accusations about socialism should be taken seriously — because when it comes to business, he's a socialist', by Matthew DeBord
  4. https://www.startribune.com/bills-passed-by-congress-and-signed-by-the-president-so-far-this-year/432015273/
  5. Flush The TPP, by Amy Goodman with Denis Moynihan
  6. "Tech billionaires take center stage at Trump inauguration" (January 20, 2025). France24. Retrieved December 21, 2025.
  7. Chris Michael (December 16, 2023). "Trump tells rally immigrants are ‘poisoning the blood of our country’". The Guardian. Retrieved December 19, 2025.
  8. Greta Reich (November 1, 2024). "Trump on RFK Jr.: ‘He’s going to have a big role in health care’". Politico. Retrieved December 19, 2025.
  9. "Trump signs order designating Antifa as a 'domestic terrorist' group" (September 23, 2025). Le Monde. Retrieved December 21, 2025.
  10. "Ultra-Reactionary Donald Trump Declares “Antifa” Terrorist Organization in Latest Effort to Expand Repression" (October 9, 2025). The Worker. Retrieved December 21, 2025.
  11. The Mythology Of Trump’s ‘Working Class’ Support, by Nate Silver
  12. Household Income: 2016, by Gloria G. Guzman
  13. Barrow, Clyde (2020). The Dangerous Class: The Concept of the Lumpenproletariat. United States: University of Michigan Press.
  14. Emperor of the Lumpenproletariat (ft. Clyde Barrow)
  15. 15.0 15.1 Far From Gone: The Evolution of Extremism in the First 100 Days of the Biden Administration Marc-André Argentino, Blyth Crawford, Florence Keen, Hannah Rose (2021) International Centre for the Study and Radicalisation
  16. Understanding American Domestic Terrorism DR. ROBERT A. PAPE (2021) University of Chicago Division of Social Sciences
  17. https://www.cnn.com/2023/03/23/politics/riley-williams-sentenced-capitol-riot/index.html