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Applebaum Warns U.S. Democracy Downgraded from Liberal to Electoral by International Observers

Diary of a CEO · Pulitzer Prize Historian: You Won't Notice Until It's Too Late! · May 11, 2026
Applebaum Warns U.S. Democracy Downgraded from Liberal to Electoral by International Observers
Diary of a CEO
Diary of a CEO
Pulitzer Prize Historian: You Won't Notice Until It's Too Late!
"The thing that's immediately notable to me is that those who made the map don't count the United States anymore as a liberal democracy. So, a liberal democracy meaning a state where the electoral rules are clear, where the electoral system is set up not to favor one party or the next. And instead, it's described as an electoral democracy, which is somewhat less free."
Applebaum presented a global democracy map showing international observers have officially downgraded the United States from a liberal democracy to an electoral democracy, placing it in the same category as some South American nations rather than alongside stable democracies like those in Western Europe, Australia, and Japan. She explained this reflects growing concerns about gerrymandering, judicial independence, and systematic efforts to shape electoral outcomes rather than ensure fair competition.

About this episode

In this episode of The Diary of a CEO, host Steven Bartlett sits down with historian and journalist Anne Applebaum for an urgent conversation about the global decline of democracy and the rise of autocratic tactics in Western nations, particularly the United States. Applebaum, who spent decades studying Soviet and authoritarian regimes, reveals she now sees patterns she once thought relegated to history repeating in real time. The conversation opens with bombshell revelations about Trump's unprecedented wealth accumulation while in office—his net worth reportedly surging from $2.3 billion to $6.5 billion—and claims that policy decisions increasingly favor presidential business interests rather than Americans. Applebaum details five core tactics autocrats use to dismantle democracies: corruption, election manipulation, civil service capture, information control, and monopolizing violence. She argues Trump's second term differs fundamentally from his first because he's now surrounded by people actively helping him avoid constitutional constraints. Perhaps most striking, Applebaum discloses that when Trump threatened to invade Greenland, Denmark and European allies began military contingency planning against the United States, including preparations to shoot down American planes—a moment she describes as permanently altering NATO allies' view of American reliability. The historian warns that ICE has been transformed into an unaccountable paramilitary force and that international observers have downgraded the U.S. from a liberal democracy to an electoral democracy. Throughout, Applebaum rejects historical inevitability, insisting citizens retain agency to defend democratic institutions through voting, civic participation, and vigilance against the normalization of authoritarian behavior.

Key takeaways

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