It’s not deflection at all, it’s key to this fascist accusation in your own interpretation above on this thread, where you use the word dictator. The American people voted for him ( twice) and very many of them like his America first ethos. He won’t be able to stand for a third term but it’s a possibility that the Republicans are elected again, it’s the people’s choice who live there. (Oreo Mon 12-Jan-26 11:14:15)
Whether Trump was elected is not the issue. Fascism and authoritarianism are defined by how power is exercised, not how it is initially acquired. Many historically authoritarian leaders were elected. The relevant question is whether Trump’s behavior - his attacks on elections, courts, the press, and constraints on executive power - aligns with recognised fascistic or authoritarian patterns. Dismissing that discussion by pointing to electoral victory avoids the substance of the claim rather than addressing it.
Just to clarify this is my simply written description of fascism.
1. Personalist strongman leadership
2. Ultranationalism (“real people” vs internal enemies)
3. Disdain for democratic norms and constraints
4. Delegitimisation of the press, courts, and elections
5. Fusion of state power with loyal elites
6. Use or encouragement of political violence
7. Myth of national decline and promised restoration
Briefing against women ministers in Westminster
Walking sticks in "tottery" in old age
What’s a household item that reminds you of your grandma’s house?


