Opinion
Guest
Essay
Trump
Unmasked
Jan. 13,
2026
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/13/opinion/trump-presidential-power-addiction.html
Thomas B.
Edsall
By Thomas
B. Edsall
Mr.
Edsall contributes a weekly column from Washington, D.C., on politics,
demographics and inequality.
President
Trump is showing symptoms of an addiction to power, evident in his compulsion
to escalate claims of dominion over domestic and international adversaries. The
size and scope of his targets for subjugation are spiraling ever upward.
Trump
began his second term with his administration clamping down on law firms and
universities. More recently he has focused his sights on an entire country,
Venezuela, with Cuba, Colombia and Greenland also high on his current list —
not to mention his claim to the Western Hemisphere in the 2025 National
Security Strategy: “After years of neglect, the United States will reassert and
enforce the Monroe Doctrine to restore American pre-eminence in the Western
Hemisphere, and to protect our homeland and our access to key geographies
throughout the region.”
“This
‘Trump Corollary’ to the Monroe Doctrine,” the report added, “is a common-sense
and potent restoration of American power and priorities, consistent with
American security interests.”
I asked
Manfred Kets de Vries, a professor of leadership development and organizational
change at Insead, an international business school, about Trump’s relationship
with power.
Kets de
Vries replied by email:
It is
possible to become addicted to power — particularly for certain character
structures. Individuals with pronounced narcissistic, paranoid or psychopathic
tendencies are especially vulnerable. For them, power does not merely enable
action; it regulates inner states that would otherwise feel unmanageable.
Donald
Trump is an extreme illustration of this dynamic. From a psychoanalytic
perspective, his narcissism is malignant in the sense that it is organized
around a profound inner emptiness.
Malignant
narcissism is a combination of narcissism and psychopathology. Because there is
little internal capacity for self-soothing or self-valuation, he requires
continuous external affirmation to feel real and intact. Power supplies that
affirmation. Visibility, dominance and constant stimulation temporarily fill
the void.
What
makes this tragic and dangerous, Kets de Vries continued, “is that this dynamic
is not playing out in the margins of political life but at its center. He is
not the dictator of a small, contained state; he is occupying the most powerful
position in the world, with consequences for all of us.”
It’s not
just Trump. The compulsion to simultaneously project power and demean
adversaries pervades the administration.
Stephen
Miller, the deputy chief of staff for policy and a homeland security adviser,
thrives on assertions of domination.
“We live
in a world,” he told CNN’s Jake Tapper on Jan. 5, “in which you can talk all
you want about international niceties and everything else, but we live in a
world, in the real world, Jake, that is governed by strength, that is governed
by force, that is governed by power. These are the iron laws of the world that
have existed since the beginning of time.”
Or take
Russell Vought, Trump’s director of the Office of Management and Budget. Even
before Trump took office, Vought fantasized in speeches about putting career
civil servants “in trauma,” making their lives so miserable that “when they
wake up in the morning, we want them to not want to go to work because they are
increasingly viewed as the villains.”
The
advisers do their best, of course, but no one outdoes Trump. “You’ll never take
back our country with weakness. You have to show strength, and you have to be
strong,” he told crowds gathered on the Ellipse on Jan. 6, 2021.
In fact,
Trump routinely outdoes himself.
In July
2019 he claimed to “have the right to do whatever I want as president.” In
March last year Trump declared not only that he has the right to do whatever he
wants but also that “I run the country and the world.”
In a
series of interviews, Susie Wiles, the White House chief of staff, captured
Trump’s addictive character, telling Vanity Fair that the president has “an
alcoholic’s personality.”
The
exercise of authority over others is, for some, an exhilarating experience.
“Power,
especially absolute and unchecked power, is intoxicating,” wrote Nayef
Al-Rodhan, an honorary fellow of St Antony’s College, Oxford, and the director
of the geopolitics and global futures department at the Geneva Center for
Security Policy, in a 2014 essay, “The Neurochemistry of Power: Implications
for Political Change.”
“Its
effects occur at the cellular and neurochemical level,” Al-Rodhan continued.
They are
manifested behaviorally in a variety of ways, ranging from heightened cognitive
functions to lack of inhibition, poor judgment, extreme narcissism, perverted
behavior and gruesome cruelty.
The
primary neurochemical involved in the reward of power that is known today is
dopamine, the same chemical transmitter responsible for producing a sense of
pleasure. Power activates the very same reward circuitry in the brain and
creates an addictive “high” in much the same way as drug addiction.
Like
addicts, most people in positions of power will seek to maintain the high they
get from power, sometimes at all costs.
I asked
Ian Robertson, an emeritus professor of psychology at Trinity College in Dublin
and the author of “How Confidence Works: The New Science of Self-Belief,” a
series of questions in this vein. He answered by email.
How is it
possible to become addicted to power?
“Power is
a very strong stimulant of the dopamine reward system of the brain — which is
the seat of addiction.”
Does the
addiction result in a need to keep exercising power in an increasingly
domineering fashion?
“Yes, a
central component of addiction is increased tolerance — i.e., you need to
increase the dose to keep the same effect. It can become an unquenchable
appetite.”
What are
the personality characteristics that are associated with addiction to power?
What needs are met for those addicted to power?
“People
(men more than women) with a high need for control and dominance over other
people (and a corresponding fear of loss of control). The need for control is
one of three basic motivational needs — the others being affiliation and
achievement. Having power over other people satisfies this deep need.”
In a Feb.
12 Irish Times article, “A Neuropsychologist’s View on Donald Trump: We’re
Seeing the Impact of Power on the Human Brain,” Robertson described the
frenzied opening days of the second Trump administration:
Deports
manacled immigrants, closes AIDS-prevention programs, starts and stops and
restarts a tariffs war, vows to cleanse Gaza of its troublesome inhabitants and
demands that all Israeli hostages be released by Hamas by midday on Saturday or
he would “let hell break out.”
This
activity, Robertson continued,
fuels an
aggressive, feel-good state of mind, particularly in dominant, amoral
personalities such as Trump’s. It also creates a restless, hyperactive state of
mind, which, when combined with a feeling of omnipotence, fosters the delusions
that you can snap your fingers and sort every problem.
At the
same time, when Trump’s grandiose plans are frustrated, it poses high risks:
“When that doesn’t happen — when Gaza or Greenland can’t be bought or U.S.
birthright abolished — this ramps up a hyperactive rage at being thwarted and
escalates a flurry of even more frenetic and unmeasured responses.”
Virtually
all politicians have a strong attraction to power. What distinguishes Trump?
When does the appeal of power lead to its abuse?
In
response to my inquiries, Adam Galinsky, a professor of leadership and ethics
at Columbia Business School, emailed to say that he has developed a concept he
calls “the little tyrant, someone who has power but lacks status, i.e., someone
who controls resources but feels disrespected. It leads people to mistreat
others in a domineering fashion.”
Addiction
to power, Galinsky continued, “is partially the result of trying to fill the
hole of insecurity left by feeling one is not respected by others. I believe
this fits Donald Trump. He has always felt disrespected, and in many ways his
entire persona resonates with his base as they feel their hold on society
slipping away.”
Trump,
Galinsky argued,
represents
what researchers call the dark triad of three interconnected, malevolent
personality traits: narcissism (grandiosity, self-centeredness),
Machiavellianism (manipulation, cynicism) and psychopathy (impulsivity, lack of
empathy/remorse).
Trump
wants to be seen as the greatest president of all time and makes everything
about himself (narcissism), he views the world as only functioning through
manipulation and exertion of power (Machiavellianism), and he is impulsive and
shows no empathy (psychopathy).
One of
the most exhaustive analyses of the adverse consequences of an addiction to
power is a 2023 article in the journal Communicative & Integrative Biology,
“On Power and Its Corrupting Effects: The Effects of Power on Human Behavior
and the Limits of Accountability Systems,” by Tobore Onojighofia Tobore, an
independent scholar and medical researcher.
In the
paper, Tobore explores the extensive scientific literature on the study of
power to show that when power is wielded by abusive politicians or chief
executives, the harm can have pervasive consequences.
In an
email responding to a series of questions I posed, Tobore wrote:
Trump
shows characteristics of a grandiose narcissist lacking in empathy. In the
current divided political environment, where checks and balances have become
significantly eroded and critical stakeholders, possibly out of fear of
bullying, are unable to push back on his behavior, we may be in for more bad
behavior from Trump.
Trump’s
success in Iran and Venezuela, in Tobore’s view, “is likely to make him
emboldened and more risk-prone. There is the possibility of more foreign
escapades and increasing talk of a third term.”
I asked
Tobore what personality characteristics are associated with addiction to power.
He replied with a quotation from his article:
The
grandiose narcissist is assertive and extroverted and distinguished by their
sense of entitlement, overconfidence, high self-esteem, feelings of personal
superiority, self-serving exploitative behavior, impulsivity, a need for
admiration and dominance, and aggressive and hostile behavior when threatened
or challenged.
Grandiose
narcissists are more likely to seek and achieve positions of power in
organizations, but they are more likely to abuse their power, pursue their
interests at the expense of the organization, disregard expert advice, causing
them to make poor decisions.
In his
paper, Tobore also cited evidence that among those inclined to abuse power, the
exercise of power has similar, if not identical, biological effects to those
experienced by addicts:
Power
abuse disorder has been coined as a neuropsychiatry condition connected to the
addictive behavior of the power wielder. Arguments have been made on the
relationship between power addiction and dopaminergic alterations.
Indeed,
changes in the dopaminergic system have been implicated in drug addiction, and
research on animals suggests that dominance status modulates activity in
dopaminergic neural pathways linked with motivation.
Evidence
suggests that areas of the brain linked with addiction, including the amygdala
and dopaminergic neurons, play a major role in responding to social rank and
hierarchy signals. Multiple lines of evidence from animal studies indicate that
dopamine D2/D3 receptor density and availability is higher in the basal
ganglia, including the nucleus accumbens, of animals with great social
dominance compared to their subordinates. Animal studies suggest that following
forced loss of social rank, there is a craving for the privileges of status,
leading to depressive-like symptoms, which are reversed when social status is
reinstated.
If that’s
true, then the linkage between dominant power status and the loss of status to
variations in hormone levels helps explain both Trump’s obsessive refusal to
acknowledge his 2020 defeat and his continuing efforts to criminally charge
those who have challenged him.
The
appeal of power is itself a healthy and natural phenomenon, according to many
of those I contacted. The problem arises when those who acquire power do so to
fulfill their narcissistic need to subjugate others and are biologically
rewarded when they do so.
Dacher
Keltner, a professor of psychology at Berkeley, made the case in an email that
“because in our evolutionary history, enjoying elevated power has benefited
individuals in terms of reproductive success, the health of their children and
kin, and their own individual flourishing.”
But,
Keltner wrote, “given individual differences, there will be a small subset of
people who compulsively seek out power in every social context and through
whatever means necessary to satisfy the need for power — to influence (and
often control) others.”
While
voicing caution over the use of the word “addicted,” Keltner contended that
the study
of addictions like alcohol or porn offers criteria for calling someone addicted
to power. I’d state those criteria as:
When
someone is compulsively exercising their power, often in inappropriate
contexts, when they can’t stop trying to control and rise in power, when it
brings about disruptions in social life.
Who is
quite likely to go overboard in the pursuit of power?
Keltner
said:
We know
that people who are prone to addictions, like the addiction to power, are
impulsive, they have trouble staying on task, they want intense sensational,
gratifying experiences, and they’re prone to antisocial tendencies — fighting
with others.
We know
those same tendencies predict who will exercise power in a domineering and
coercive fashion. So what this tells us is that certain individuals — the
impulsive, the angry, the individual who has trouble focusing and staying on
task — will gravitate toward exercising power in domineering, as opposed to
collaborative, ways.
Addiction
to power in the right hands, Keltner contended, can be beneficial:
If you
have a strong need, even addiction, for exercising power and are inclined to
the more collaborative approach, you will engage in more of that kind of
behavior in your exercise of power — of bringing individuals together, building
collaborations and alliances, encouraging and strengthening subordinates, etc.,
and if you are more domineering or coercive by default, that need or addiction
to power will amplify those tendencies — undermining others, dehumanizing
others, aggression, violence and extraction, weakening allies, hording
resources.
Over the
past week, it felt as though Trump was even more intensely compelled to
publicly announce his determination to dominate everything in sight, and anyone
who wants to block him had better watch out.
Perhaps
most spectacularly, during a Jan. 7 interview with four Times reporters, Trump
was asked if there were any limits on his global powers.
He
replied: “Yeah, there is one thing. My own morality. My own mind. It’s the only
thing that can stop me.”
“I don’t
need international law,” he added.
Trump may
think his own morality and his own mind are the only constraints on his
otherwise limitless power, but if we are dependent on either — not to mention
Trump’s sense of empathy, compassion or sympathy for the underdog — we are in
deep trouble. The nation, the Western Hemisphere and the world at large need to
figure out how to place restraints on this ethically vacuous president, or we
will all suffer continued and ever-worsening damage.


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