January 10, 2026
by johnny
I often bemoan my inability to produce posts on any sort of regular schedule, but my indolence does have at least one positive aspect; I’m slightly less likely to publish poorly-considered analysis that soon turns out to be laughably inaccurate.
This week is a case in point. I was all set to pen a piece looking forward to 2026, specifically anticipated developments in US politics, in which I intended to strike a broadly optimistic tone. My reasoning was thus; with mid-term elections looming, and thoughts turning to the post-Trump succession, the relatively sensible figures in the administration, like Vance and Rubio, whose support for the President was always more opportunistic than ideological, would make some effort to rein in the insanity, if only to ensure that the US would still be a functioning nation when their turn to run it came around.
One week in, and that prediction is already faring poorly, to put it mildly. Trump, or at least those who are influencing his increasingly bewildered mind, has doubled down on the madness, launching reckless neo-imperialist adventures, picking fights with close allies, unleashing goons to terrorise the citizenry, and topping it off with a declaration that he recognises no morality other than his own desire.
Accordingly, my mood has shifted from cautious positivity to a deep gloom; there is no way this will end well. Trump cannot be planning to allow free elections to go ahead in November. The only question is whether he will try to maintain a facade of legitimacy by rigging them, or just go full out and suspend the constitution altogether. Either way, significant turmoil seems guaranteed.
On the other hand, perhaps I’m just getting too caught up in mid-winter paranoia. The resistance of ordinary citizens is growing by the day, and this will surely turn the political tide. Even if the Democrats can’t convert that into electoral success, Republican support for Trump is beginning to waver too. Tipping the US into full-blown fascism would be extremely bad for business, and there is no particularly pressing reason to do it, so one might expect that at some point the GOP hierarchy will remember that their primary purpose is to promote the interests of American capitalism, and pull the plug.
I guess I’m just about convincing myself to stick with my original hopeful outlook, despite the evidence. We’ll find out soon enough if that is rational or delusional…