trump's and hitler's 1st 100 days compared
I wrote the book on
Hitler’s first 100 days. Here’s how Trump’s compare
https://forward.com/opinion/715816/trump-100-days-hitler-roosevelt/
Crucially, Trump hasn’t matched Hitler’s efficacy
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President Donald Trump on April 25. Photo by Aaron
Schwartz/CNP/Bloomberg/Getty Images
By Peter FritzscheApril
28, 2025
In July, 1933, President Franklin D. Roosevelt described the
“crowded events” that set “the wheels of the New Deal” in motion during the
first few months of his new presidency — effectively inventing the concept,
during a fireside chat, that the first 100 days of any presidential term were
of particular importance. In the same year, Adolf Hitler, who had been
appointed Germany’s chancellor on Jan. 30, was busy consolidating dictatorial
power — an effort in which he found remarkable success.
That success came, in large part, because Germany’s
institutions quickly, under the threat of force, fell in line with Hitler’s
vision. Hundreds of thousands of previously unaffiliated Germans embraced the
new Nazi rulers, assembled in celebrations, flew Nazi flags, and sought
membership in the Nazi Party. Elites in business, the universities, the civil
service, the judiciary, and the army might have been uneasy about this or that
part of the new order. But they much preferred Hitler’s “national revolution”
to the old system of the Weimar Republic, with its checks and balances and
parliamentary compromise.
And in the example of Hitler’s
first 100 days in power — about which I published a book in 2020 — is an unsettling lesson for the
contemporary United States, where President Donald Trump has employed many of
the same moves as Hitler in working to swiftly consolidate power in the early
months of his second term.
Related
Trump and Jews: The first 100 days
https://forward.com/news/715870/first-100-days-trump-jews-antisemitism-israel/
For Hitler, everything depended on ensuring a Nazi party
victory in the parliamentary elections that came on March 5 — 35 days into his
term as chancellor. After gaining a slim but critical majority in that vote,
Hitler moved quickly to establish the so-called “people’s” government he had in
mind by taking control of the individual states like Prussia and Bavaria,
adding his storm troopers to local police forces, and creating massive
performances suggesting national unity through ceremonies broadcast over radio.
In the week after the elections, Nazi Party loyalists all
across the country helped in the effort. They banned socialist newspapers,
ransacked trade-union offices, raised the Nazi flag over city halls, and
assaulted Jews as well as the lawyers who came to their defense.
Related
Opinion:The dangerous Nazi legend behind Trump’s ruthless
grab for power
https://forward.com/opinion/713686/dolchstosslegende-nazi-lie-adolf-hitler-donald-trump/
Just over two weeks after the election, on March 23 — day 53
— the Catholic Party joined the Nazis and their allies to facilitate the
passage of the Enabling Act, which suspended the constitution and shifted
emergency power from the office of the president — then Paul von Hindenburg —
to that of the chancellor. Hitler was officially able to govern as dictator,
and, after political paralysis and amid the depths of the economic depression,
the Third Reich was able to act.
On April 1, day 62, the Nazi Party engineered a nationwide
boycott of Jewish business, which they followed up in less than a week by the
less showy, but far more consequential, “restoration” of the civil service,
which mandated the termination of Jewish employees. Any mailman, teacher, or
judge with one Jewish grandparent was out of a job; the Reich also encouraged
the dismissal of anyone else deemed politically unreliable.
This lock-step revolution in social and political life was
enforced by violence. Without due process, thousands of political opponents
were thrown into the Nazi Party’s concentration camps, and thousands more were
roughed up. Throughout, the public’s support for the political audacity and
national unity of the Third Reich became more visible.
This genuine wave of hope and enthusiasm is what really
scared opponents or skeptics on the sidelines. It energized all sorts of local
initiatives against anyone who offended Germany’s new ethnic unity — namely,
Jews, who were boycotted, barred from swimming pools, and no longer permitted
even to lend “Jewish” names to the telephonist’s spelling guides. On April 22,
day 83, “Z as in Zacharias” officially became “Z as in Zeppelin.”
After 100 days, Hitler was well on his way to outlawing
rival political parties and coordinating civic groups into Nazi structures in
an effort to break up divisive social milieus.
In the same time period, Roosevelt had taken the U.S. by
storm. Just around his own 100-day mark, the humorist Will Rogers quipped,
“Congress doesn’t pass legislation anymore, they just wave at the bills as they
go by.” There was some truth to what Rogers said: Facing the unrelenting
pressures of the Great Depression, Roosevelt’s crucial Emergency Banking Relief
Act passed unanimously. But there were strong demonstrations of the health of
U.S. democracy, as well: Roosevelt’s National Industrial Recovery Act was
passionately opposed by many Republicans, as well as some Democrats.
There were striking parallels between Roosevelt’s and
Hitler’s efforts: Both leaders took swift, strong action to upend the existing
political order in their country. But there were even more striking
differences: Not only was there no dictatorial Enabling Act in the U.S., but
Roosevelt addressed Americans as “my friends,” while Hitler, often wearing a
brown party uniform, spoke to “racial comrades.”
Trump, on that latter point, is not exactly following
Roosevelt’s example. He addresses Americans as either believers or disloyalists
— not friends. He has, too, governed as if he has an Enabling Act in place:
declaring faux-emergencies, and ignoring laws, established procedures and court
orders alike. He has renamed things in the name of patriotism — see the Gulf of
Mexico, or, as Trump would have it, Gulf of America — and taken pointed
measures against those who have refused to accept such pronouncements as law,
including by banning The Associated Press from the White House
press pool. There is a curated gleefulness about his administration’s arbitrary
and excessive displays of power — say, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem posing for
photos in front of caged deportees in an El Salvador prison.
Related
Opinion:The Germans have a word for what’s happening in
Trump’s America
https://forward.com/opinion/700261/german-word-forced-into-line-nazis-at-the-watercooler-trump/
But Trump hasn’t mimicked Hitler’s or Roosevelt’s
effectiveness. He lacks a cohesive ideological outfit, “the orderly component
parts” of “careful planning” needed to construct the “connected and logical
whole” that Roosevelt tried to explain in his fireside chat. And he doesn’t
have the equivalent of Hitler’s 2 million ideologically vigilant storm troopers
to enforce a revolutionary agenda, either.
There is another key difference to 1933: Unlike Hitler,
Trump does not have the growing support of the public.
But Trump is succeeding on one front with terrifying
parallels to Hitler in 1933: He has created a growing sense of uncertainty in
America — uncertainty about the direction of government; the endurance of
mandated changes; the dangers of speaking up; the fickleness or depth of his
own popular support; and whether the future could possibly see a restoration of
stability.
Germans in 1933 struggled to figure out who was a true
convert to Nazism, who was an opportunist, and who was just frightened. But
what they all learned was that there would be no moderating restabilization of
the Third Reich. It kept on overreaching, with catastrophic consequences, until
its defeat at the end of World War II.
Observers today don’t know what to expect. There is no
apparent plan for stability or accountability, or even any sense of courtesy or
mercy in those who govern. That vacuum makes it easy to be either overly
optimistic about a return to sense and normalcy, or overly pessimistic about
shifts in the entire gravitational field of American politics.
Out of kilter, we are susceptible to all sorts of anguished
distortions about the integrity of our leaders, our neighbors, and ultimately
ourselves. Germans in 1933, including the Nazis themselves, called the victims
of this phenomenon “Märzgefallene” — those who had, for whatever reason,
“fallen down.” One primary reason they did so: They assumed that everyone else
already had.
Related
https://forward.com/opinion/674236/trump-hitler-fascism/
Peter Fritzsche is a professor of history at the
University of Illinois, where he has taught since 1987. He is the author of
numerous books on Germany and the Third Reich, including Hitler’s First
Hundred Days: When Germans Embraced the Third Reich.
The views and opinions expressed in this article are the
author’s own and do not necessarily reflect those of the Forward. Discover
more perspectives in Opinion. To
contact Opinion authors, email opinion@forward.com.
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