For democracy advocates, Donald Trump and much of his agenda is rather terrifying. Indeed, the president spent part of this past weekend promoting a specific phrase — “He who saves his Country does not violate any Law” — described by The New York Times’ Jamelle Bouie as “the single most un-American and anti-constitutional statement ever uttered by an American president.”
Meanwhile, on the other end of Pennsylvania Avenue in the nation’s capital, Americans see a Republican-led Congress that’s grown far more interested in glorifying Trump personally than conducting oversight or honoring the legislative branch’s proper role in a checks-and-balances system. Indeed, GOP lawmakers routinely shrug their shoulders with indifference in response to White House abuses and excesses.
It’s reached the point at which Steve Levitsky, a political scientist at Harvard University, told The New Republic’s Greg Sargent that Americans should recognize the contemporary Republican Party as “an authoritarian political party. “
The question then becomes how much of the party’s base would mind. The latest national Pew Research Center survey included some striking findings:
In contrast, a 59% majority of Republicans and Republican-leaning independents say many of the country’s problems could be addressed more effectively if Trump didn’t need to worry so much about Congress or the courts. Republicans who say they ‘strongly’ identify with the GOP are particularly likely to say the nation’s problems could be more effectively addressed by giving Trump more power: 78% say this.
The partisan divisions were enormous: 90% of Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents concluded it would be “too risky” to give Trump more power without checks and balances, but according to the Pew data, a majority of GOP voters came to the opposite conclusion.
(The survey was conducted from Jan. 27 to Feb. 2, 2025. A total of 5,086 panelists responded out of 5,699 who were sampled, for a survey-level response rate of 89%. The cumulative response rate accounting for nonresponse to the recruitment surveys and attrition is 3%. The margin of sampling error for the full sample of 5,086 respondents is plus or minus 1.6 percentage points.)
Alas, there’s no reason to see the results as an outlier. The Associated Press reported last spring, for example, on a national AP-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research survey, which found that 57% of Republicans endorsed the idea of Trump “taking action on the country’s important policy issues without waiting for Congress or the courts.”
An NPR/PBS/Marist poll, released around the same time, asked respondents whether they agreed that conditions in the U.S. had deteriorated to the point that “we need a leader who is willing to break some rules to set things right.” Among GOP voters, a 56% majority endorsed the idea.








