Trump 0.2: The Failing Revolution
The 2025 Trump was supposed to be a more refined version of the 2017 original. But according to National Interest editor Jacob Heilbrunn, Trump 2.0 has fizzled into Trump 0.2. 2025 will be remembered, Heilbrunn argues, as the beginning of the end of Trump’s authoritarian aspirations. MAGA has fractured, the administration is incompetent, and Trump himself is running what Heilbrunn calls an "absentee landlord" presidency. And things, Heilbrunn predicts, are only going to get worse. In 2026, he suspects, there will be a serious economic downturn—even an AI-triggered 1929-style crash—that will only formalize the dismal failure of Trump's second regime. Perhaps. Although Trump always seems most resilient after being written off by DC pundits like Heilbrunn. The old pugilist, albeit only a “quasi-Caesar”, still has a few more rounds in him. Three more years, to be exact.
Keen On America is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit keenon.substack.com/subscribe
The Heartbeat of the Wild: David Quammen's conservationist manifesto from landscapes of wonder, peril and hope
Do You Dream of Electric Sheep? Jordan Crandall on the appropriate literature for our new age of superintelligence
That Was The Week in Tech: Keith Teare predicts a failed Apple virtual reality headset but is more bullish on Twitter's reinvention as X
Message on an Envelope: Stephen Games rethinks the publishing industry by reimagining books as postcards
The 7 Deadly Myths: Alex Ryvchin on antisemitism from the time of Christ to Kanye West and the Ashburton Army
The Wounded World: Chad Williams on W.E.B. Du Bois and the First World World
Anything but Halycon: Elliot Ackerman imagines an America of President Al Gore in which there is technology that can resurrect dead people
Our Kids Will Ask Us What We Did: Skye Perryman explains why she is fighting to save American democracy
Like the Appearance of Horses: Andrew Krivak on war, language, memory and why ChatGPT will never understand beauty
The World as a Big Book Club: David Blake explains the resiliency of the physical book and why he is cautiously optimistic about the impact of AI on both publishing and storytelling
Carry Strong: Stephanie Kramer offers an empowered approach to navigating pregnancy and work
Talking Turkey: Soli Özel makes sense of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's return to political power
How to Scale Trust: David Samson on making tribes and tribalism work in the 21st century