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Home » Three Historians Debate The Era of Trump on Uncommon Knowledge 2025 (Transcript)

Three Historians Debate The Era of Trump on Uncommon Knowledge 2025 (Transcript)

Read the full transcript of Uncommon Knowledge 2025 episode titled “Niall Ferguson, Victor Davis Hanson and Stephen Kotkin: Three Historians Debate The Era of Trump”, with host Peter Robinson, October 14, 2025.

Niall Ferguson, Victor Davis Hanson, and Stephen Kotkin are all senior fellows at the Hoover Institution. The topic: IS THE UNITED STATES IN DECLINE OR ON THE VERGE OF RENEWAL?

INTRODUCTION

PETER ROBINSON: The American experiment begun almost 250 years ago. Is it finally coming to an end or is it being renewed? Three of the most accomplished historians in the English-speaking world, Victor Davis Hanson, Sir Niall Ferguson and Stephen Kotkin. Uncommon Knowledge. Now welcome to Uncommon Knowledge. I’m Peter Robinson.

All three of our guests today are fellows here at the Hoover Institution. A historian of Greece and Rome, Victor Davis Hanson has published more than 20 works of history, including his classic volume, “A War Like No Other: How the Athenians and Spartans Fought the Peloponnesian War.” Victor’s most recent book, “The End of Everything.”

A historian of the 19th and 20th century, Sir Niall Ferguson has himself published more than 15 books, including his own classic, “The Pity of War: Explaining World War I.” Niall is now working on the second volume of his biography of Henry Kissinger.

A historian of the Soviet Union, Russia and Asia, Stephen Kotkin is the author yet again of a pile of books including “Uncivil Society: 1989 and the Implosion of the Communist Establishment.” Stephen is now working on the third and final volume of his definitive biography of Joseph Stalin.

Gentlemen, welcome.

The Scale of Consequentiality

The scale of consequentiality: two quotations, and I’m going to ask you for a number. Here are the quotations. Professor of Political Science David Faris in Newsweek recently, quote: “Trump may go down as the least effective president in modern history. His record of failure is so overwhelming that historians may struggle to find anything worth remembering.”

Here’s the second. This is an article in American Heritage recently: “Mr. Trump may be pilloried by contemporary scholars even as he is remembered in history as perhaps the most consequential president in three quarters of a century.”

On a scale of consequentiality, Abraham Lincoln is 10. Chester Allen Arthur is 1. Give me a number, Victor.

VICTOR DAVIS HANSON: 7.

PETER ROBINSON: Niall.

NIALL FERGUSON: I’ll go higher. 8.

PETER ROBINSON: Really?

NIALL FERGUSON: Yes.

VICTOR DAVIS HANSON: Steven, as of now.

PETER ROBINSON: All right.

STEPHEN KOTKIN: Too early to tell.

PETER ROBINSON: Oh, but if you had to give me a number.

STEPHEN KOTKIN: You had historians on the program intentionally and now you’re going to pay the price. It’s just way too early to tell. Eighty-year-old men who are president are a small number of our presidents so far. And it’s hard to tell when we can finally get beyond the group of 80-year-olds running our politics. And what comes next. And what comes next will be as consequential or more consequential.

NIALL FERGUSON: I disagree with that. We are in the fifth year of the Trump era and I think it is not too early to tell that he is one of the most consequential presidents certainly of the postwar era. Think of the transformation he has brought about in the way politics itself functions in the United States.

Donald Trump has transformed the nature of political discourse. That alone is consequential. He broke up a postwar order, a set of assumptions, not least of which was that free trade should be the basis of US international economic policy. No, he’s a transformative figure.

And I think we can tell now, does it end in tears or in triumph? That we can’t tell. And that won’t be obvious until the end of his term. But it’s clear that he’s drastically altered the way that American politics works. And I’d go further. And he’s even more consequential internationally. He’s broken the postwar international order. He’s radically altered it, and I think irreversibly altered it. And any European will agree with that. They don’t like it, but they’ll admit everything has changed because of Donald Trump.

STEPHEN KOTKIN: So the WTO was broken before Trump was in politics, boys. The imperial presidency was written by Arthur Schlesinger in 1973. I mean, let’s be historians for a second.

NIALL FERGUSON: Let’s be historians, Steve. The average tariff rate of the United States today has not been as high as this since the 1930s.

STEPHEN KOTKIN: The US is 25% of global GDP since 1870, and that’s with tariffs and without tariffs, with income tax and without income tax.

NIALL FERGUSON: You don’t judge president’s consequences.

STEPHEN KOTKIN: The consequentiality of a president is not measured by policy changes.

PETER ROBINSON: We’re moving to a new question. We will let him say.

VICTOR DAVIS HANSON: Could I just say one thing?

STEPHEN KOTKIN: Let him have a say. You invited him on the show.

VICTOR DAVIS HANSON: I think he did.

PETER ROBINSON: I worked hard on it. Apparently we don’t need it.

VICTOR DAVIS HANSON: Niall has outlined the foreign policy. I think he did three things that were transformational on domestic policy, not the particular issue.

STEPHEN KOTKIN: Stop.

PETER ROBINSON: We’ll get to domestic policy.

VICTOR DAVIS HANSON: They’re not policy issues.

A Squeaker Election with Enormous Change

PETER ROBINSON: I promise I will carve out a space for you to say what you’re going to say. But first, I have another sort of preliminary question which I think is truly interesting, at least to me. And here it is.

He won a very narrow victory as a proportion of the popular vote. Donald Trump won reelection in the sixth closest presidential contest in American history. Republicans won a majority in the House of only five seats, one of the smallest majorities in all of history. They won a majority in the Senate of six seats, which is fairly sizable as Republican majorities go, but still far from overwhelming.

So we have a squeaker of an election. Nobody could argue that that was a mandate.

VICTOR DAVIS HANSON: Yeah, I could.

PETER ROBINSON: All right, then you get the first go at this.