People do not drift towards authoritarianism because they suddenly wake up one morning craving jackboots. Most are reacting to systems that increasingly feel exhausting, indifferent and faintly ridiculous.
Try rearranging a delivery and you disappear into automated menus and hold music for half an hour. Try contacting a GP surgery and you're asked to describe your symptoms in under 200 characters like a village fete slogan competition. Young couples with decent jobs can't buy homes anywhere near where they grew up unless somebody dies conveniently.
Public services still exist, technically, but increasingly feel like ageing machinery nobody's properly serviced in years. Things still sort of function, in the same way an elderly washing machine still works if you kick the side occasionally and don't ask too much of it.
Meanwhile politicians speak in managerial jargon and social media has turned public discourse into a giant pub row where everybody's got a megaphone and nobody can remember what started it. So when somebody arrives promising order, strength, certainty and national renewal, it's not exactly shocking that people listen.
The trap is what comes next.
Authoritarianism always presents itself as the cure for chaos. It never advertises the invoice afterwards. Nobody stands on a stage saying: “Vote for me and eventually independent institutions will weaken, criticism will become dangerous, loyalists will replace experts, and corruption will quietly seep into the machinery of the state.” Instead they talk about pride. Betrayal. Control. Enemies. Restoration.
Simple answers to complicated problems, which human beings have always found deeply attractive. Democracy is messy and cognitively demanding. It asks populations to tolerate compromise, ambiguity, delay and people they dislike. Authoritarianism offers something emotionally much easier: certainty, clarity and somebody to blame. Right up until the complicated problems reappear wearing a crash helmet and carrying petrol.
That drift has happened repeatedly. Weimar Germany didn't collapse because Germans suddenly became cartoon villains. It collapsed after economic crisis, political paralysis, humiliation and institutional decay destroyed faith in the existing order. Mussolini rose in a country exhausted by instability and fear of social collapse. Even the Roman Republic drifted gradually towards strongman rule as citizens lost faith in old institutions and started looking for figures who promised order instead of process.
The post-war settlement interrupted that pattern for a while. After two world wars and the Great Depression, Western societies built systems that gave ordinary people enough security, housing, rising living standards and functioning public services to make democracy feel worth defending. It was never perfect, obviously. Britain in the 1950s wasn't exactly a Scandinavian advert full of smiling cyclists and attractive furniture. But millions felt they had a stake in society and that their children would probably do better than they had.
But that settlement was an interlude, not the natural end point of history. It depended on unusual conditions: rapid growth, cheap energy, expanding industry, younger populations and American dominance, alongside a lingering fear among elites that if capitalism didn't moderate itself a bit, communism might eventually turn up and redecorate the place entirely.
The uncomfortable truth is that periods of major renewal often arrive only after societies have frightened themselves badly enough to abandon old assumptions. The post-war settlement emerged from the ruins of depression, fascism and total war. Political systems that had previously seemed incapable of serious reform suddenly became remarkably flexible once elites and populations alike had watched civilisation drive itself into a ditch twice within thirty years.
That doesn't mean war itself creates prosperity. Europe in 1945 was shattered, not wealthy. But crises often act as brutal reset mechanisms. They sweep away dead political assumptions, weaken entrenched interests and make previously impossible reforms suddenly achievable. The worrying question is whether modern democracies can still reform themselves peacefully before some new shock forces the issue for them.
Over time, politicians began treating that stability as automatic, as though prosperity and social trust were simply part of the plumbing and would continue working without maintenance.
Well, now the plumbing's rattling.
And there's another problem. One of the principal architects and guarantors of that post-war order increasingly appears to be losing faith in it itself. The United States spent decades underwriting the Western alliance system, liberal democracy and the rules-based order. As Vlad Vexler recently observed, the burglar outside your locked gates is worrying enough. The burglar already wandering around your living room is rather more alarming.
And then there are the oligarchs and billionaire patrons who increasingly treat politics as a personal hobby. Men with enough wealth to influence public discourse globally, yet insulated from many of the consequences, amplifying polarisation and institutional distrust because they benefit from it, enjoy the chaos, or simply like feeling important.
That's hardly new either. Authoritarian movements have often been aided by wealthy figures who assumed they could ride the tiger without eventually being eaten by it. History's full of moments where frightened populations and overconfident elites accidentally built something monstrous together, then looked surprised when it started smashing the furniture.
And democracies often do look ridiculous. Endless committees. Judicial reviews. Coalition squabbles. Ministers contradicting themselves before breakfast. Watching Parliament can sometimes resemble a school debate where nobody's read the brief properly but everybody still wants to make a speech.
But democracies possess one enormous advantage over authoritarian systems. Their arguments happen in public. They can correct themselves without requiring the whole structure to collapse first. Authoritarian systems often look stronger partly because disagreement and failure are hidden until the cracks become impossible to ignore.
Authoritarian systems look efficient because disagreement is suppressed. The trouble is that disagreement is also how societies detect errors. Remove criticism and leaders begin governing inside an echo chamber built from fear and flattery. Reality doesn't disappear. It merely waits outside with a cricket bat.
History is littered with strongmen who promised renewal and delivered stagnation wrapped in flags. The Soviet Union came after decades of economic senility hidden beneath displays of strength. Fascist regimes often lurched from theatrical confidence into catastrophe with astonishing speed. Even modern authoritarian states suppress information their own leaders actually need in order to govern properly, which isn't ideal if you're attempting to run a country rather than a fan club.
That's the irony. People turn to authoritarianism because they want competence and control. They often end up with systems that are more brittle, more corrupt and less capable of correcting mistakes.
The deeper problem is that the post-war bargain has steadily frayed without anything durable replacing it. People were promised that endless efficiency drives, outsourcing, deregulation and globalisation would quietly deliver permanent prosperity in the background. Instead many got stagnant wages, unaffordable housing, insecure work and the growing suspicion that institutions no longer function properly unless you're affluent, connected, or useful to somebody important.
Well, into that gap step the strongmen, the grifters and the men with flags, all promising simple answers and national renewal.
That's why merely shouting “fascist” at voters achieves very little. People don't abandon democratic norms because they secretly long for dictatorship. They do it because they conclude the existing system no longer functions properly.
If democratic societies want defending, they first have to become defendable. That means housing people can afford. Infrastructure that works. Borders that are controlled rather than theatrical. Public services that function without requiring documentary evidence from 1997 and a blood sample. Energy systems based on abundance rather than permanent scarcity. Politicians capable of speaking like actual human beings instead of malfunctioning LinkedIn posts. Otherwise the man promising simple answers starts sounding increasingly persuasive.
And history suggests that once populations begin confusing certainty with wisdom, matters tend to deteriorate rather quickly. Usually beneath enormous flags while somebody insists all the problems are caused by traitors, foreigners, intellectuals, or whichever convenient group's been selected for the week.


























