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Home » PoliticsGirl: w/ Historian Timothy Snyder (Transcript)

PoliticsGirl: w/ Historian Timothy Snyder (Transcript)

Read the full transcript of renowned historian and author Timothy Snyder’s interview on The PoliticsGirl Podcast, June 17, 2026.

Editor’s Note: In this episode of the PoliticsGirl podcast, host Leigh McGowan sits down with renowned historian and author Timothy Snyder to examine the current state of American democracy and the threats posed by the rising tide of authoritarianism. Throughout their conversation, they dissect the transactional nature of the Trump administration, exploring how it has undermined American power, institutions, and the rule of law. Ultimately, Snyder emphasizes that while there are significant reasons for anxiety, the situation is not inevitable, and he urges listeners to move from recognition to collective, joyful action to help turn the tide.

Introduction

LEIGH MCGOWAN: Hello and welcome to the PoliticsGirl Podcast. I’m your host, Leigh McGowan. Let’s get into it.

As today’s guest Timothy Snyder argues, freedom is the great American commitment, but we’ve lost sight of what it means. The New York Times bestselling author, Yale, and now University of Toronto historian is best known for his expertise on authoritarianism and his books On Tyranny and On Freedom. And while we can use the first book to recognize how far down the rabbit hole America has gone, it’s the ideas in the second book that he sees as our chance for survival.

So I’m having a conversation with Professor Snyder today for obvious reasons, because clearly American democracy is in deep crisis and we are not the only country in the world where authoritarians are rising. The world order is changing and we need to understand where we stand in that change and what we’re willing to do to avoid the worst-case scenario.

So without further ado, please welcome my guest, world-leading historian, now U of T professor, and award-winning author Timothy Snyder. Welcome back, Professor.

TIMOTHY SNYDER: Hey, glad to be with you.

From Recognition to Action

LEIGH MCGOWAN: Oh, I’m so glad you’re here today. Here’s what I’ll say. People are afraid right now. If you’re looking around and you’re seeing the news and you’re seeing what’s going on, they feel very anxious, but you aren’t someone who’s known to be a worrier. You’re someone who is known to see patterns and then reflect on those patterns. So what are you seeing right now? And what would you have us know about what you’re recognizing?

TIMOTHY SNYDER: That’s a really good question, because I think we have to move from recognition to action rather than from recognition to anxiety. And I’m not speaking to people who have good reason to be anxious, like people who are undocumented or for other reason are directly in the crosshairs of this regime.

But for many of us, we have this kind of luxury where we go from recognition of a problem to being anxious or worried or fearful about it. And the anxiety or the worry and the fear then displaces, unfortunately, the little actions that we could take. And it’s the little actions which are all we have to do in order to turn this all around.

So what I recognize is that we have a president who is trying to engineer a regime change towards a permanent authoritarian system. That is what’s going on. All the evidence is right in front of us. He talks about it pretty much every day in the words, in the tonality. Pretty much all the policy decisions point that way.

Just to give an obvious example, the idea of giving the military a trillion and a half dollars is just— I mean, on its face, it’s a bribe so that the military will support him as he tries to rig elections, stay in power forever. Like, that’s what he’s trying to do. And I realize that if we say that, then we might have emotional reactions to it. But what I’m trying to say is that if we don’t say it, if we don’t notice it, then we’re going along with it. We’re giving them time they don’t deserve. We’re giving them points they don’t deserve.

The stuff that they’re doing, they’re doing it, but it’s going to fail if we do our part. If we do a modicum, if we do the things we’re supposed to do, it’s going to fail and it’s going to fail badly. It’s going to fail embarrassingly. He’s not popular. The war in Iran is not popular. Giving billions of dollars of tax money to his friends is not popular. Corruption is not popular.

They want to rig the election, and that is also not popular, and that should make them less popular. And we should make sure that they will be punished if they try to do something like that.

So we have to recognize that, yes, they’re attempting something drastic, because without recognition, we become participants in it. But once we recognize it, we have to move to a position of action and victory because the victory is very much within our grasp. And the thing which is stopping us, the main thing which is stopping us from being victorious, is being anxious about what they’re trying to do. Yeah, they’re trying to do it and yeah, it has to be stopped, but it can be stopped.

Trump’s Military Dictatorship Budget

LEIGH MCGOWAN: Let me back you up to what you were talking about, about this budget for the military. You just wrote an article on this, which is what you call Trump’s military dictatorship budget. Can you expand a little bit on that? Because people often say, “Show me your budget and I’ll show you your priorities.” And Trump’s budget here seems pretty extraordinarily clear. He has a plan.

And just so people understand, Trump’s proposal is to increase the military budget by nearly 50%. And it is, as Professor Snyder has said, a bribe in many ways to officers and soldiers so they will side with him when he tries to overthrow the Constitution or stay in power indefinitely.