MaddowBlog-Over 24 hours, Trump's authoritarian vision comes into focus (yes, again)
Every once in a while, the president has a day a single 24-hour period in which his authoritarian vision comes into sharp relief.
Occasionally, Trump has a 24-hour period in which his authoritarian vision comes into sharp focus. Between Monday and Tuesday, he
- vowed to target dissenters
- threatened reporters
- sued the NYT
- extrajudicial military strikes
- refused to enforce TikTok law www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddo...
— Steve Benen (@stevebenen.com) 2025-09-17T13:03:37.887Z
https://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow-show/maddowblog/24-hours-trumps-authoritarian-vision-comes-focus-yes-rcna231843
And then, every once in a while, the president has a day a single 24-hour period in which his actions bring into sharp focus just how authoritarian his agenda actually is. Consider this unsettling timeline:
Monday, Sept. 15, in the afternoon: Trump told reporters about his plans to target progressive organizations, adding that hed already spoken to Attorney General Pam Bondi about bringing racketeering charges against some of the people youve been reading about. The New York Times noted soon after, President Trump has begun a major escalation in his long-running efforts to stifle political opposition in the United States.
Monday, Sept. 15, in the afternoon: Trump boasted about his latest deadly military strike against a civilian boat in international waters, which he claimed was helmed by narcoterrorists and carrying illegal narcotics headed to the U.S. Asked to bolster his claim with evidence, or to explain how such strikes are legal, the president declined.
Monday, Sept. 15, in the afternoon: Responding to a conservative reporter who said that anti-war protesters near the White House still have their First Amendment right, Trump replied, Yeah, well, Im not so sure.
Monday, Sept. 15, in the evening: Trump bragged about having filed a $15 billion lawsuit against The New York Times, accusing the newspaper of attempting to ruin his reputation by publishing reports he didnt like. It is the latest in a series of civil suits hes filed against independent news organizations that have bothered him with accurate reporting.
Tuesday, Sept. 16, in the morning: Asked about his efforts to profit from the presidency, Trump threatened to report an Australian journalist to his countrys authorities.
Tuesday, Sept. 16, in the morning: Trump told ABC News Jonathan Karl that the Justice Department will probably go after him and his network, suggesting the reporters coverage might meet the threshold for hate speech.
Tuesday, Sept. 16, in the morning: Trump called for the incarceration of a prosecutor in Georgia who tried to hold him accountable for alleged crimes after his 2020 election defeat.
Tuesday, Sept. 16, in the afternoon: Trump boasted to reporters that U.S. naval forces, acting on his orders, had knocked off a third civilian boat in international waters.
Tuesday, Sept. 16, in the afternoon: Trump announced that he would continue to refuse to enforce a federal law related to TikTok.
Individually, each of these developments is unsettling to those who take democracy seriously, but dont miss the forest for the trees: These arent just disconcerting anecdotes, theyre collectively one dramatic story about a president and an administration thats increasingly overt in their indifference to American democracy and the rule of law.