Reveals how the U.S. Supreme Court's presidentialism threatens our
democracy and what to do about it.
Donald Trump's presidency made many Americans wonder whether our system
of checks and balances would prove robust enough to withstand an
onslaught from a despotic chief executive. In The Specter of
Dictatorship, David Driesen analyzes the chief executive's role in the
democratic decline of Hungary, Poland, and Turkey and argues that an
insufficiently constrained presidency is one of the most important
systemic threats to democracy. Driesen urges the U.S. to learn from the
mistakes of these failing democracies. Their experiences suggest,
Driesen shows, that the Court must eschew its reliance on and expansion
of the "unitary executive theory" recently endorsed by the Court and
apply a less deferential approach to presidential authority, invoked to
protect national security and combat emergencies, than it has in recent
years. Ultimately, Driesen argues that concern about loss of democracy
should play a major role in the Court's jurisprudence, because loss of
democracy can prove irreversible. As autocracy spreads throughout the
world, maintaining our democracy has become an urgent matter.