By Heather Cox Richardson
It seems that former president Donald Trump is aligning his supporters with a global far-right movement to destroy democracy.
On Saturday, in Durham, New Hampshire, Trump echoed Nazi leader Adolf Hitlerâs attacks on immigrants, saying they are âpoisoning the blood of our countryââalthough two of his three wives were immigrantsâand quoted Russian president Vladimir Putinâs attacks on American democracy. Trump went on to praise North Korean autocratic leader Kim Jong Un and align himself with Hungarian prime minister Viktor OrbĂĄn, the darling of the American right wing, who has destroyed Hungaryâs democracy and replaced it with a dictatorship.
Trump called OrbĂĄn âthe man who can save the Western world.â
Dr. Sarah Riccardi-Swartz, a professor of religion and anthropology at Northeastern University, explained in The Conversation what Trump is talking about. Autocrats like OrbĂĄn and Putinâand budding autocrats like Trumpâare building a global movement by fighting back against the expansion of rights to women, minorities, and LGBTQ+ people.
Russian leaders have been cracking down on LGBTQ+ rights for a decade with the help of the Russian Orthodox Church, claiming that they are protecting âtraditional values.â This vision of heteronormativity rewrites the real history of human sexuality, but it is powerful in this moment. OrbĂĄn insists that immigrants ruin the purity of a country, and has undermined womenâs rights.
Riccardi-Swartz explains that this rhetoric appeals to those in far-right movements around the world. In the United States, âfamily valuesâ became tied to patriotism after World War II, when Chinese and Soviet communists appeared to be erasing traditional gender roles. Those people defined as anti-familyâLGBTQ+ people and women who challenged patriarchyâseemed to be undermining society. Now, as dictators like Putin and OrbĂĄn promise to take away LGBTQ+ rights, hurt immigrants, and return power to white men, they seem to many to be protecting traditional society.
In the United States, that undercurrent has created a movement of people who are willing to overthrow democracy if it means reinforcing their traditional vision. Christian nationalists believe that the secular values of democracy are destroying Christianity and traditional values. They want to get rid of LGBTQ+ rights, feminism, immigration, and the public schools they believe teach such values. And if that means handing power to a dictator who promises to restore their vision of a traditional society, theyâre in.
It is an astonishing rejection of everything the United States has always stood for.
The White House today responded to Trumpâs speech. White House deputy press secretary Andrew Bates said: âEchoing the grotesque rhetoric of fascists and violent white supremacists and threatening to oppress those who disagree with the government are dangerous attacks on the dignity and rights of all Americans, on our democracy, and on public safetyâŚ. Itâs the opposite of everything we stand for as Americans.â