The Normalization Of Autocracy
from the surrendering-democracy dept
The White House Correspondents Association has just capitulated to pressure from the Trump administration by removing comedian Amber Ruffin from its annual dinner. Their stated reason? “To ensure the focus is not on the politics of division.” This seemingly minor capitulation reveals something profound about how democracy dies—not through dramatic confrontation, but through a thousand small surrenders dressed up as civility, bridge-building, and institutional preservation.
Let’s be absolutely clear about what happened: A comedian called members of an administration implementing policies that deport people to face torture without due process “murderers” who aren’t “human beings.” The administration demanded she be removed. And instead of defending the principle of free expression—supposedly the cornerstone value of a press organization—the WHCA unanimously backed down.
Two plus two equals four. There are twenty-four hours in a day. And no amount of high-minded rhetoric about “re-envisioning our dinner tradition” can disguise what this represents: the normalization of autocracy through the quiet surrender of institutions that should be democracy’s strongest defenders.
This pattern has become distressingly familiar. Institutions faced with authoritarian pressure justify their capitulation as pragmatism, as bridge-building, as focusing on what “really matters.” But with each surrender, the space for democratic resistance narrows. With each concession, autocratic behavior becomes more normalized. With each institutional compromise, the cost of standing firm increases.
What makes this particular surrender so revealing is how it exposes the moral compromise at the heart of institutional responses to democratic backsliding. The WHCA isn’t some random organization—it’s a body explicitly dedicated to protecting press freedom. Its very purpose is to defend the right to speak truth to power. Yet when actually confronted with power’s displeasure, they didn’t just modify their approach—they unanimously abandoned it.
The language of their surrender is particularly telling. By framing a comedian’s criticism of an administration implementing objectively cruel policies as “the politics of division,” they implicitly position resistance to autocracy as equivalent to autocracy itself. This both-sides framing, where calling out authoritarian behavior is treated as equally problematic as the behavior itself, reveals a profound moral confusion about what democracy requires.
Democracy doesn’t depend on everyone being polite to each other. It doesn’t require critics of power to moderate their language so that those in power don’t feel uncomfortable. What democracy absolutely requires is that power be held accountable—that its abuses be named clearly, that institutions stand firm against authoritarian pressure, that the right to criticize those in power be defended even when that criticism is harsh.
What’s most disturbing about the WHCA’s capitulation is how it reflects a broader pattern of institutional surrender. From media organizations that prioritize access over accountability, to universities abandoning academic freedom in the face of political pressure, to corporations quietly accommodating authoritarian demands to maintain market position—our democratic institutions are failing at precisely the moment when they should be standing firm.
This dynamic creates what political scientists call “democratic erosion”—a process where democracy isn’t overthrown in a dramatic coup, but gradually hollowed out from within as its institutional guardians surrender its core principles one by one. Each surrender is justified as a practical necessity, as avoiding unnecessary conflict, as focusing on what “really matters.” But what could matter more than defending democracy itself?
The WHCA’s decision reflects a profound misunderstanding of the current moment. They appear to believe that by removing a potential source of conflict, they’re preserving their institutional role. But in an autocratic system, institutions don’t maintain their independence by accommodation—they survive only as long as they’re useful to power. By demonstrating their willingness to self-censor in response to government pressure, the WHCA hasn’t preserved its independence; it has signaled its fundamental malleability.
What makes this particularly dangerous is how it shifts the Overton window of acceptable government behavior. When an administration can successfully pressure a press organization to remove a critic, that success becomes a precedent for more aggressive interventions. Today it’s removing a comedian from a dinner; tomorrow it’s demanding the firing of reporters whose coverage is deemed unfair. Each successful intervention makes the next one easier.
To frame this capitulation as “bridge-building” rather than surrendering to power is, to use a term I don’t employ lightly, gaslighting. It’s attempting to convince us that defending basic democratic principles is somehow divisive, that holding power accountable is somehow partisan, that standing firm against authoritarian pressure is somehow counterproductive.
This isn’t bridge-building—it’s burning the bridges of democratic accountability while pretending to strengthen them. It’s abandoning the very principles that make a free press possible while claiming to celebrate them. It’s normalizing autocracy while pretending to preserve democracy.
The institutions we’ve trusted to defend democratic norms are failing us—not because they’re being violently overthrown, but because they’re voluntarily surrendering their independence in the name of civility, access, and institutional preservation. They’re choosing the appearance of normality over the reality of resistance, prioritizing their short-term institutional comfort over their long-term democratic purpose.
What’s perhaps most distressing is how quickly this surrender happened. One complaint from a White House official about harsh criticism, and an institution ostensibly dedicated to press freedom unanimously abandons its plans. When resistance collapses this easily, what hope is there for holding the line against more significant authoritarian pressures?
We must recognize these small surrenders for what they are: not pragmatic accommodations, but moral abdications that cumulatively threaten democracy itself. Every institution that bends to authoritarian pressure makes it harder for others to stand firm. Every principle abandoned in the name of civility weakens the foundations of democratic governance.
Two plus two equals four. There are twenty-four hours in a day. And no amount of institutional compromise will protect democracy if the institutions themselves abandon the principles they were created to defend. The path to autocracy isn’t paved with dramatic confrontations but with quiet capitulations justified as reasonable accommodations to power.
The WHCA’s surrender is a warning—not just about a dinner or a comedian, but about how democracy dies. Not with a bang, but with a careful, consensus-driven press release explaining why principled resistance to power is simply too divisive to maintain.
Mike Brock is a former tech exec who was on the leadership team at Block. Originally published at his Notes From the Circus.
Filed Under: amber ruffin, capitulation, correspondents dinner, free speech, press freedom, truth to power, white house
Companies: whca
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Comments on “The Normalization Of Autocracy”
I heard no bell.
Re:
There wasn’t a fight in the first place. The liberals had their white flags raised as soon as they saw the fascists’ angry looks.
The Emperor has no clothes.
There would never be a “politics of division” of we didn’t let bad faith idiogarchs into seats of power in the first place.
I’d argue there is no revelations in this discovery. Political coverage is just terrible these days. The list of failures is long, numerous, and depressing. Of course this was going to happen. There’s no timeline in which the WHCA wasn’t going to deep throat the authoritarian boot their are allegedly independent of.
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Is there a more tedious reaction to an article than “this isn’t surprising”? Neither is the weather in Phoenix, but my local paper still has a weather section.
If you want plot twists, watch an M Night Shyamalan movie.
Re: Re:
Trump has been dead the entire second term, having been mortally wounded in the July 2024 attack. What we think of as “The President” is actually some deepfake software rendering the output of a random-foreign-policy generator.
Re: Re: Re:
Weekend at Donnie’s. Trump’s corpse has had animatronic parts installed and an LLM speech engine trained entirely on a boomer grandpa’s 4chan posts. Nobody notices that his bad smell is any worse than it was before.
Should it ever have been normalized...
… for the press to invite the people they cover to dinner in the first place? Apparently Trump didn’t attend these in his first term, and probably wasn’t going to attend this one. But I bet he was invited, and previous presidents always did go, and as far as I can see that’s excessively cozy.
That goes for a lot of other Washington “socializing”, too. Starting with “prayer breakfasts” and going from there. In politics, sometimes you’re going to find you have to oppose people, so keep those people at work and get some other friends.
I’m a big dummy thinking agencies and departments would stand against Donny’s nonsense. But there are way too many people ‘just following orders’ for my liking.
The jenga tower of a democratic society can only stand so many pieces being removed. The blame for the collapse won’t fall on any individual person, even if one person pulls the final piece. But the fact that it’s distributed means everyone is an animal in the Little Red Hen. When asking who is to blame, it’ll be “‘Not I’ said the pig,” all the way down. You reverse the process by standing firm even when it’s inconvenient or even painful to do so, thus showing others that resistance isn’t futile, but necessary. And it’s not just necessary in fair weather, but more so when there’s hail and lightning strikes coming down. You shove the footage of the dogs and fire hoses in the face of anyone who thinks that capitulation will help them weather the storm. You play them Chamberlain’s “Peace in our Time” speech and then you play them Churchill’s “We shall fight on the Beaches” speech and you draw the obvious line between why the former led to the latter.
Even Amber herself played it off for laughs, which was disappointing.
The fact that anyone still believes that “principled resistance” is enough to stop the U.S.’s march into fascism at this point is a big reason why it’s going to keep picking up speed.
You could never reason with fascists. You used reason on the general public, to keep them opposed to the fascists and away from positions of power. But once you lose enough public interest in opposing them, the “principled” approaches are useless.
BULLIES
Bullies demand obedience, compliance, capitulation, and quiet.
Victims provide all those things.
Now let’s play word association:
Bullies Republicans
Victims Democrats
Squished swamprats Everyone else subject to these people
This isn’t about democracy dying slowly. It’s the capitulation, bending of the knee, obedience, and feckless victims allowing the bullies to do whatever they want and saying “please, Sir, may I have another.”
Is it EASIER to capitulate than to fight? Of course.
Res ipsa loquitur.
That you think this is unexpected on the part of the WHCA is the surprising part to me. If the journos that are a part of it are supposed to be truth tellers and adversarial to those in power, why do they yuck it up together in a big corpo funded event every year?
Major corpos, politicians from both sides, and prominent journo orgs… The 3 groups that are in theory supposed to all be against each other to some degree all getting together to get flush with a new round of corporate donor cash… Why wouldn’t such a group of journos “sell out”? They did eons ago when they formed the group and agreed to go in the first place.
They have always been a stage play, to make you think they were adversarial when they havent been from the start. Take a moment to look behind the curtain, for Oz is not all as it seems…
I agree with canning this lady. That’s uncalled for. Call the Trumpists bullies. Call them fascists. Call them autocrats and hateful bigots. But to say they aren’t human beings is over the top. Dehumanizing your foes is the first step being just like them. It’s that fatal mistake that Trumpists have already committed. When you stop seeing those who oppose you as human, everything is justified. It is precisely that “everything is justified” instinct that must be most ferociously resisted at times like this.
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i’m not sure about the specifics, but dehumanizing and othering people is also dangerous because it is a narcotic that aids us in ignoring the very fact that human being are very much capable of atrocity of the highest order.
Bit shitcanning someone from a dinner for using some rhetoric which the offended party regularly uses is pretty fucking dumb and disingenuous.
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I agree that what she said was wrong. dehumanizing the worst humans doesn’t make everyone else better.
However: Her removal can’t happen (when constrained by reason, sanity, and the preservation of the continuance of constitutional US governance) in response to a petty executive branch who doesn’t like her reporting, that was mostly factually correct (I wouldn’t consider “aren’t human beings” to be a literal statement, since in basically all cases its understood to be hyperbole, even if inappropriate and harmful).
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Found the liberal that got scratched.
That’s ironic, because the conservatives speaking will likely very much focus on the politics of division.
Re: 'I'm allowed to punch down, how DARE you think you can punch up?!'
Standard conservative/thug hypocrisy: ‘Me calling you subhuman and deserving of no right or even your life is just making conversation, you standing up for yourself is provocation and a gross violation of civility.’
Standing up for the fifth estate
Seriously, thank-you for continuing to cover this circus with unfailing willingness to calling a spade a spade. If the mainstream media had a fraction of your dedication to the truth, there just might be a little more outrage amongst the citizens of your country, which just might be enough to slow democracy’s walk through the shadow of death.
Keep up the good fight.
'Speak truth to power(so long as they agree to let you)!'
The WHCA isn’t some random organization—it’s a body explicitly dedicated to protecting press freedom. Its very purpose is to defend the right to speak truth to power. Yet when actually confronted with power’s displeasure, they didn’t just modify their approach—they unanimously abandoned it.
Rather awkward to be quoting this particular individual given yesterday’s article but the point still stands.
‘If you don’t stick to your values when they’re being tested, they’re not values, they’re hobbies.‘ -Jon Stewart
It’s easy to claim that you stand for a free press and speaking truth to power when it doesn’t cost you anything to do so, the true test is what you do once there is a cost and on those grounds the WHCA demonstrated how empty and worthless their words were and are.
Brilliant Mike Brock piece
They should rename it the White House’s Correspondents Assn., since they’re accountable only to the White House. So-called “President” Eugene Daniels has the backbone of a snail. Bravo Mike Brock for exposing them.
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Alternatively they could go with White House Stenography Association, as they’ve shown that they believe that their job is to just repeat whatever the WH tells them to and nothing else.
MANCHURIAN president
Raymond Shaw? Frank Sinatra? Angela Lansbury? What a classic.
Now we no longer need to be concerned with a “candidate” when he’s been elected. Pro-Russia pro-Ch[y]na pro-tariff anti NATO anti EU anti cooperation, and too stupid to put a coherent sentence together.
If you take the stupidest president on earth and put him with the stupidest doggie rich guy on earth and then be a used car salesman caricture on the lawn at 1600 Pennsylvania avenue, and pay a hooker to be quiet and hire idiots for every possible cabinet position…
IF…
IF… you did all that, are you not the biggest traitor to the United States? But if you’ve replaced the SCOTUS and bullied the pussies in the legislature, who’s going to give you the Traitor Treat?