Is the United States becoming more like Russia under Trump?

August 8, 2025

Allan Cooper

OPINION by ALLAN COOPER

I and others here in the United States are looking into a future where the similarities between our country and Russia are becoming more and more resoundingly clear. The following are a dozen ways that the United States and Russia, under the present Trump administration, are beginning to increasingly mirror one another.

1) Russia has one ruling party called the United Russia Party. Currently, Republicans are maintaining their role as the ruling party through gerrymandering (i.e., Texas), disempowering and replacing election officials who are encouraged to alter election results (i.e., Georgia) and through shifting Democratic governor’s appointment authority to Republican-held offices (i.e., North Carolina).

If terrorist cells within the United States manage to pull off a devastating attack on American soil, God forbid, while Trump is president, which is likely now that the CIA and FBI are being systematically dismantled, Trump will declare martial law allowing him to postpone all elections. This would leave the Republican Party as our only de facto party.

2) Russia has few if any checks and balances between their executive, legislative and judicial branches. Trump, with the help from the Supreme Court and the Republican Party is also significantly scaling back these checks and balances.

Trump has been politicizing the military by replacing generals with his yes-men, he has control over the judicial branch thanks to an obeisant Justice Department and Supreme Court and he has control over the legislature as long as the Republican Party remains in power.

3) Putin exerts political influence with the help of the Russian state-run television and radio channels. Trump is now exerting power over the forth estate by his legal harassment and intimidation of the press (note the defunding of NPR, PBS, Comcast and Voice of America). And if there ever was a state run television channel in the United States that helps to promote Trump’s agenda, it would be FOX.

4) The Russian president holds a dominant role, including the right to issue decrees. Trump, through his unconstitutional executive orders, is now exercising a dominant role over the other two branches of government.

5) Russia has never had a deeply ingrained tradition of a legal system that binds the ruler. Thanks to the Supreme Court, Trump is no longer bound by the laws of the land either.

6) In Russia, the role of other political parties (if they are allowed to exist) appears to be more about legitimizing the existing system by creating an appearance of democracy. So too, in the United States, there is an attempt to portray elections as legitimate but only if the Republican Party is guaranteed to win that election.

7) In Russia, the vast majority of incarcerated individuals are housed in penal colonies. So too, in the United States Trump is creating massive penal colonies (a.k.a. detention centers) for those people he considers “undesirable”.

8) Russia’s penal colonies, often located in remote locations, are overcrowded and have poor sanitation and inadequate heating .The incarcerated are subjected to systematic torture. So too, Trump’s penal colonies mirror these conditions and are located in remote locations as well (El Salvadore, South Sudan, Guantanamo and the Florida everglades).

9) In Russia the incarcerated have limited or no communication with the outside world. So too, with Trump’s penal colonies.

10) Russia incarcerates political prisoners on trumped up charges (excuse the pun). The U.S. government no longer provides habeas corpus (the right to challenge one’s detention) to those it considers undesirable which now includes U.S. citizens who are also considered undesirable, and that could include you or me.

11) In Russia, oligarchs maintain close ties with the government, wielding influence over policy and relying on political connections for business security. This parallel has become even more conspicuous in America through Elon Musk’s presence in the Trump administration.

Like Russia, courts and other legal systems in the United States, due to deregulation and the elimination of any oversight, can no longer prevent oligarchs appropriating more business through their political connections.

12) In Russia, Putin is allowed to enrich himself through bribes, control over state assets, and quid pro quos with his oligarchs. His wealth is concealed through the use of off shore shell companies.

Because the U.S. Justice Department no longer seems to uphold the emoluments clause, Trump can build and conceal his wealth through the use of opaque financial structures such as payments from unknown LLC’s and cryptocurrency ventures – many involving foreign actors.

Of course, there will continue for a while to be one major difference between Russia and the United States.

Russia has a GDP of $2.1 trillion and the United States has a GDP of $26.9 trillion. So there will still be plenty of money for some U.S. consumers to play with up until the arrival of the Second Great Depression.

Note that because of the tariffs that Trump is unilaterally imposing, many economists are predicting that a great depression could occur within the remaining years of Trump’s “reign.”

Alan Cooper, a long-time San Luis Obispo resident, is a member of Save Our Downtown.

 


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I don’t think people who say things like this about Trump really believe what they are saying… they just want you to believe it…. think about that for a second….


Ah, the “America is becoming Russia” talking point. It’s always interesting to hear the latest dystopian fan fiction from the left—equal parts alarmist speculation and selective amnesia. Let’s take a deep breath, maybe pour a cup of coffee not laced with Cold War paranoia, and walk through this rationally.


1) The “one-party state” theory

Yes, the GOP is winning in certain states, but that’s called democracy—voters cast ballots and the majority rules. Gerrymandering? Please. Democrats gerrymander too (hello, Maryland). And the idea that Trump is plotting martial law and election postponement is not only baseless—it’s recycled 2016 hysteria. Spoiler: the 2020 election did happen. Trump lost. There was no martial law. The military didn’t roll into Philadelphia with tanks.


2) No checks and balances?

The same courts you say Trump controls have repeatedly ruled against him. Remember the blocked travel bans, the rulings over his tax returns, or his failure to overturn 2020 results? Trump didn’t “dismantle” the CIA or FBI—he clashed with leadership, sure—but both agencies still function (and still leak like a sieve).


3) Trump controls the media?

Trump has zero state-run media. Meanwhile, CNN, MSNBC, the New York Times, Washington Post, ABC, CBS, NBC, and most of Hollywood have been loudly and gleefully anti-Trump for nearly a decade. If Trump controls the press, he’s doing a lousy job. Fox News is privately owned—not a government mouthpiece. NPR and PBS, by the way, still exist and are still taxpayer-funded.


4) Executive orders aren’t Russian decrees

Obama signed more executive orders per year than Trump. Biden has already outpaced them both. Executive orders are not “unconstitutional” just because you don’t like them. If they were, they’d be struck down—oh wait, courts do that. Another sign that checks and balances are alive and well.


5-6) Democracy is still functioning

Joe Biden was elected. The House flipped. Governors and mayors across the country are Democrats. You may not like the system, but saying it’s rigged because your team doesn’t always win isn’t evidence of autocracy—it’s politics.


7-9) Penal colonies? Really?

So now immigration detention centers are “penal colonies”? That’s some serious rebranding. These centers existed under Obama and Biden too. Conditions there should absolutely be humane—but comparing them to Russian gulags is an insult to actual victims of authoritarianism.


10) Political prisoners?

Trump’s administration didn’t lock up journalists, left-wing activists, or opponents. In fact, half of Hollywood made a second career out of mocking him daily. You don’t have to fear the knock at the door just because you tweeted “Trump is a fascist.” In Putin’s Russia, you do.


11-12) Oligarchs and corruption

America has billionaires, sure—on both sides of the aisle. Bezos, Soros, Zuckerberg, Bloomberg… oligarchs all, by your definition. The difference is they can’t buy military commissions or dictate court rulings. If you’re going to argue that Elon Musk has undue influence, you’ll also need to explain Hunter Biden’s international business dealings with his dad one phone call away from the Oval Office.


And as for the Great Depression 2.0?

You’re entitled to your opinion, but the facts suggest otherwise. Trump’s first term delivered record-low unemployment, energy independence, and a booming stock market—until COVID. Economists predicting “doom” under Trump often ignore the alternative: a Biden economy lurching under inflation, high interest rates, and sluggish growth. Tariffs may be controversial, but China’s not exactly playing fair either.


In conclusion:

Comparing Trump’s America to Putin’s Russia is like comparing a neighborhood HOA president to a warlord. You can dislike Trump’s tone, tweets, or tariffs—but let’s not abandon logic for hyperbole. Criticism is fair. Fear-mongering is not. Let’s keep the debate grounded in reality—not in worst-case hypotheticals dressed up like inevitable futures.


And hey, if the Republic were truly dead, you wouldn’t be free to post your twelve-point manifesto without anyone kicking down your door, would you?


Beachside Skeptic, very well laid out response. Thank you.


Excellent counter-argument. I served overseas with NATO soldiers from the former Warsaw Pact countries. Mr. Cooper is not listening to Voice of America and the BBC in secret, under pain of arrest and imprisonment. He’s a very comfortable denizen of the Central Coast, which I refer to as The Shire, thoroughly insulated from the world outside.


Not that it may matter much to you, but in Russia , if you publicly criticize the President or the apparatchiks, you fall out a window or die mysteriously while in prison. Not here… apparently.

You might add that fact.


One more story to cement any doubt about how stupid Democrats can be.

We live in a State that is entirely controlled by one party.

And it might be the worst State, if not for New York.

Democrats are killing America with discord and BS.

When has Trump started a War?

The author needs to quit smoking the Crackpipe and go back to sleep.

America is doing fine with the present Leadership.

Checked your 401K lately?


“ Checked your 401K lately?”


Every day. My portfolio is up a bit this year so far, but have sold some recently because of current volatility caused by Mr. Trump. I did buy some shares of GEO Group (look it up) last October when I thought Trump might win. Bought at $14 and it was up over $24 for a while but has dipped a bit recently.


I made far more money under Obama and Biden than the 4.5 years of Trump. He did make permanent that tax cut he passed seven years ago so that’s good for my bottom line, but I didn’t really need it.


As for Russia, America is nothing like it, even under Trump and I spent a year there and in Ukraine studying their farming techniques. That was well before Putin, but their way of governing has not really changed. Trump is obviously the worst, and while he is cockroach like, he will die soon and the current American fever dream will be over. Maybe we can come back to our senses. I just worry that Trump’s regime has so coarsened our public discourse that we will never get back to a time when we can compromise on important issues.


“We live in a State that is entirely controlled by one party.” Exactly. That will continue to be the case as long as the Dominion Voting Machine is employed in processing our elections, rest assured.


TDS in all its glory


With all due respect, the same could be said for our current governor. Maybe you should look at his redistricting plan and note that the 40% in CA who voted republican will have about 6% representation. Who is ruining democracy? Do you feel CA citizens are prioritized over non-citizens? Are homeless priorities put ahead of public safety? Are environmental policies so extreme that energy needs for our citizens will further erode what little disposable income they have to enjoy their lives?


Wow a severe case of TDS. If anything your gibberish sounds like the last four years of the Hunter Biden regime.


Pretty damn amusing.


I agree.


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