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The Last American President: A Broken Man, a Corrupt Party, and a World on the Brink

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Trump didn't break American democracy—he revealed how broken it already was.

In this urgent, deeply researched book, four-time Project Censored Award–winning, New York Times bestselling author Thom Hartmann argues that Trump is a symptom, not the disease. The real story is the ecosystem that built a childhood defined by cruelty, a mentor who weaponized shamelessness, a political party that sold its principles for power, and a donor class that used him to dismantle the guardrails on their own greed.

Inside, you'll find
a psychological portrait of how Trump was made—not born; a clear-eyed account of how the Republican Party and billionaire networks enabled his rise; global comparisons to Hungary, Venezuela, and Weimar Germany—because this pattern has a name; and 7 proven, history-backed strategies for defeating authoritarianism before it becomes permanent.
This is not a book about despair. It is a book about recognition—and resistance.

For readers of How Democracies Die and On Tyranny who are ready to move from understanding the crisis to doing something about it.

The choice, as always, is ours.

224 pages, Kindle Edition

Published September 23, 2025

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About the author

Thom Hartmann

76 books382 followers
Thomas Carl Hartmann is an American radio personality, author, businessman, and progressive political commentator. Hartmann has been hosting a nationally syndicated radio show, The Thom Hartmann Program, since 2003 and hosted a nightly television show, The Big Picture, between 2010 and 2017.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 30 reviews
Profile Image for Wick Welker.
Author 10 books724 followers
December 19, 2025
This is a fine book and I disagree with nothing but I learned nothing new. This is a cursory level analysis of Trump and the rise of neofascism in the US. There is nothing new here and the American exceptionalism left a bad taste. Milquetoast liberals love to talk about how we need to get back to our democratic roots ect and ra-ra-ra go activism and boycotts and non-violent resistance. The blind spot is the US has never ever ever been a bastion of freedom or democratic values so it always comes across disingenuous to me. America, at its best, has always been a halfway house of freedom, never a paragon.
Profile Image for Gabrielė Bužinskaitė.
331 reviews163 followers
December 18, 2025
Was this book written by ChatGPT? This question bothered me the whole time I was reading it. The structure of sentences felt like it, though I would love to give the benefit of the doubt (out of denial).

Aside from the fact that I struggled to focus out of worries of reading an AI-prompted book (just thinking of it pains my face with disgust), it was almost interesting.

The author (I’d hope) covered Donald Trump’s childhood and other psychological aspects from his biography, which explains his eccentric demeanour at least in part and, with that, the way he runs the United States of America.

Like some Trump critics, Hartmann describes the 47th US president as a mere symptom of a deeply polarised country, not its cause. The author also questions the validity of the last presidential election and repeatedly doomsays about fascism (Trump as a dictator-to-be) and environmental collapse.

It could be decent, even provocative. Unfortunately, I can’t move past the AI scare.
555 reviews23 followers
November 23, 2025
This is an exceptionally honest book about the crisis facing the United States today. Every democracy loving person needs to read it. Hartmann lists the steps needed to save our democracy, if we can join together to implement them.
Profile Image for Kurt.
706 reviews97 followers
March 18, 2026
Ever since the day before the 2024 election, I have refused to watch any broadcast news. Instead, I rely on reading journalistically legitimate articles and books, filtering through lots of other slightly less reliable material, and doing a lot of fact checking. I find it to be a difficult balancing act to stay reasonably informed and at the same time keep my sanity.

This book pushed me to my emotional limits. It details most of the corrupt and brazen attacks by the ruling party upon our Constitution and democracy. I grieve daily for the loss of the country I grew up with. I have always known that my country had its flaws, but at least in the past, I felt assurance that the vast majority of elected and appointed officials who governed did so with the best interests of the people and the country in mind. Today it is painfully obvious that this is no longer the case. I grieve for the the great country we could have become if not for the corruptive influence of money and power.

One thing I will always remember from this book was the author's moniker for the billionaire class, whom he calls "the morbidly rich." These are the sociopaths whose hunger for money, power, and influence can never be satiated – those bloated, soulless individuals who eagerly strive for more, all at the expense of everyone less fortunate than they.

Here is just one almost random sample from this book that stuck with me:
The response to the Access Hollywood tape ["grab them by the pussy"] moment wasn’t just Republican hypocrisy, it was a preview of the moral and Constitutional abdication to come, when standing up for any principle became secondary to standing with their leader no matter where he led them – even into insurrection, even into anti-American lawlessness, even into the abyss.
Profile Image for Charles Wagner.
198 reviews2 followers
October 31, 2025
A government without empathy
This, by far, is the most frightening Hartmann book I have read.
This tome names names, corporations, and “think” tanks. The system- wealth, organized religion, crazy people- produces power leaders who give them tax breaks, religious goodies, and powers beyond that of mortal men. Couple this with a gullible/misinformed voting/non-voting public and disaster strikes. And, it is apparent that the current apparent leaders can easily be replaced with those even more awful and wacky at a second’s notice. It is an amazing phenomena.
Hartmann has outlined an evolutionary power growth which makes me wonder how a Democrat since Reagan was ever elected President and if a Democrat will ever again be elected. The future task may prove extremely more insurmountable. It appears improbable that the voters, if not disenfranchised and if there is another election, and if it would be even partially fair, will educate themselves enough to become informed voters.
The emperor commands an incomprehensible media presence owned by a few wealthy oligarchs who appear to care for nothing other than their own wealth and power.
A search of Evergreen Indiana turned up no Hoosier library owning this title and a great deal of poor Dewey Decimal cataloging of other titles. Yes, you will have to buy a personal copy.
Profile Image for Fanchen Bao.
150 reviews10 followers
February 27, 2026
This book provides a cursory look at Trump, his younger and formative years, being influenced by his father and Roy Cohn, as well as the rich soil, mainly cultivated by the right wing and the Republican party, that allows the Trump flower to blossom. For someone less knowledgeable about Trump's upbringing and the key events that have shaped American politics (e.g., Citizen United), the book serves as a good history summary. But for those more familiar with the major events and players, I doubt the book can provide any new insights.

The book is apparently against Trump and the Republican party. It is not surprising that most, if not all, of the damning examples, such as serving the rich donors, influencing judges, gerrymandering, misinformation campaign, voter restriction, etc. originate from the Right. I wonder, however, whether the same things, maybe to a lesser degree, also apply to the Left? After all, the left wing politicians, though constantly ridiculed by the progressive folks as being incompetent, have won a lot of elections as well. Is it the case that the Left is so popular that the Right must employ all the dirty tricks just to be on the same footing (effect of the tricks will permanently tilt the scale), or that the left also employs the same tactics but simply hides them well enough to not get exposed as much as the Right? I surely hope it is the former, but one never knows.


Interesting Quotes


In Weimar Germany, the Nazi Party never won an outright majority in free elections. Instead, conservative elites believed they could control Hitler, using his popular appeal while restraining his worst impulses. They were wrong.

--p2. The same happened to the GOP. The Republican Party is no longer a good-faith player in a democracy.


In each case, democracy died not through military coups but through legal mechanisms, not in a single dramatic moment but through the accumulation of seemingly minor changes. The forms of democracy remained -- elections still happened, courts still ruled, newspapers still printed -- but the substance had been hollowed out, replaced by the raw exercise of power unconstrained by democratic accountability.

--p2.


We are not guaranteed another free election. The Constitution is not self-executing; it requires people of good faith to defend it. We are not promised a second chance at this experiment called democracy.

--p4. To me, this was one of the biggest revelation that without people of good-faith to actually follow the laws and implement the rules, democracy collapses astonishingly easily. Democracy requires a lot of work (best example is all the extra research my wife has to do before casting a vote on a petition or candidate). Autocracy, on the other hand, does not require any work -- you just follow, no thinking is needed. No wonder authoritarianism always acts like gravity.


Trump thrived in this environment in some ways, earning athletic honors and rising to a leadership position as a student officer. But even here, his need to dominate led to problems; he was demoted from his position for hazing younger cadets, revealing an early pattern of abusing power when it was granted to him.

--p11-12.


"The final key to the way I promote is bravado," he wrote. " I play to people's fantasies. People may not always think big themselves, but they can still get very excited by those who do. That's why a little hyperbole never hurts. People want to believe that something is the biggest and the greatest and the most spectacular. I call it truthful hyperbole. It's an innocent form of exaggeration -- and a very effective form of promotion".

--p14. "Truthful hyperbole" later bred a younger brother "alternative fact". These words come from The Art of the Deal, which are not actually from Trump, but the ghost writer Tony Schwarts.


This early triumph caught the attention of Senator Joseph McCarthy, who made Cohn his chief counsel during the infamous anti-communist hearings of the early 1950s. Together, McCarthy and Cohn embarked on a campaign of accusation, innuendo, and character assassination that ruined countless lives and careers without ever uncovering a single Soviet spy.

--p19. "This early triumph" refers to Cohn's role in wrongfully accusing and sentencing to death Ethel Rosenberg, the definitely not guilty beyond-the-doubt wife of a Soviet Spy Julius Rosenberg.


Their tactics were as simple as they were devastating: make bold, inflammatory accusations; demand that the accused prove a negative; use the media to amplify fear; and never, ever back down from a claim, no matter how thoroughly debunked.

--p19.


Trump received at least $413 million in today's dollars from his father, Fred, not the $1 million "small loan" he repeatedly claimed.

--p29. LOL, even $1 million is not a "small loan".


Behind the gold-plated facade, the reality was a businessman whose ventures regularly failed, who was kept afloat by his father's money, by bannks too invested to let him fail, and eventually, by the licensing of his name to properties and products he neither built nor created.

--p35.


Principles that had defined conservatism for generations -- free trade, fiscal responsibility, personal character, respect for the law, strong alliances -- were abandoned overnight.

--p36. The fact that these principles could be so readily abandoned signifies that they have never been true principles, but political slogans to dupe the people. What they really want, what all people in the position of power want, is just more unimpeded power.


He wasn't, as so many have suggested (particularly Democrats) just some political anomaly or a weird, media-driven glitch in American democracy. He was, instead, the inevitable product of political structures meticulously constructed by morbidly rich ideologues and the fossil fuel industry over decades; all systems designed to concentrate power in the executive branch, weaponize the historic grievances that have haunted American politics for three centuries, and systematically dismantle the democratic guardrails that, up until now, have kept us a free nation.

--p39-40. If not Trump, there would have been somebody else. The right wing has cultivated the ripe soil for half a century; it is only a matter of time before the right man steps into the role well designed for him.


Nixon saw these disaffected white Southern voters as key to a new Republican majority. Thus was born the GOP's "Southern Strategy," a deliberate effort to appeal to white racial anxieties without explicitly racist language.

--p45.


Gingrich published a 1990 memo titled "Language: A key Mechanism of Control," instructing Republican candidates to refer to Democrats with words like "traitors," "pathetic," "sick," "corrupt," and "anti-flag."

--p47. I feel the nefarious impact of Newt Gingrich has not been highlighted enough in the general public.


Simultaneously in October 1996, Rupert Murdoch and Roger Ailes launched Fox News, transforming not just the media landscape but the American mind itself.

--p48.


Ostensibly sparked by CNBC commentator Rick Santelli's February 2008 rant against mortgage relief, the Tea Party presented itself as a spontaneous uprising of citizens concerned about government spending and debt.

In reality, it was "astroturf": fake grassroots. Behind the seemingly organic protests were well-funded conservative organizations like Americans for Prosperity and Freedom Works, backed by fossil fuel billionaires like the Kochs.

--p49.


Senator Lindsey Graham's transformation encapsulates this bargain. In 2015, Graham called Trump "a race-baiting, xenophobic, religious bigot" who was "not fit to be president." By 2019, he had become one of Trump's most ardent defenders, telling reporters, "To every Republican: If you don't stand behind this president, we're not going to stand behind you."

--p52. Being an invertebrate is a requirement to serve in the GOP. Heck, that is a serious insult to the marvelously diverse and beautiful invertebrates.


In Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, the court's 5-4 Republican majority struck down key provisions of campaign finance laws dating all the way back to the late nineteenth century, ruling that corporations and outside groups could spend functionally unlimited sums on elections through the Super PACs the decision invented.

--p56. So that is what Citizens United represents, a legal and open way to bribe and capture the politicians and even the political system.


Unlike the First Gilded Age, when robber barons like J. P. MOrgan and John D. Rockefeller primarily purchased individual politicians, this Second Gilded Age enabled the wholesale capture of our political system itself. The American experiment in self-governance -- unique in its founding premise that all political power originates from the people themselves -- was being fundamentally rewired to ensure that political power originated from those holding or controlling great wealth.

--p57.


This wasn't policy in any traditional sense. It wasn't designed to address national challenges, strengthen the economy's foundations, or improve the lives of most Americans. It was plunder, pure and simple: a massive upward redistribution of wealth to the GOP's donor class that had purchased the presidency with the blessing of five corrupt Republicans on the Supreme Court.

--p61-62. "This wasn't policy" refers to the fact that a Republican politician must do his donors' bidding, which most of the time only benefits the rich donor class, if he/she wishes to secure future donations to campaign for the next election.


Private detention companies had every reason to maximize detainee numbers, minimize spending on care, lobby for harsher policies, and fight alternatives to detention, even when those alternatives were more humane and cost-effective.

--p71. One of the most ridiculous oxymorons is "privatized prison". When Capitalism is seen as a hammer, everything, including the prison system, which is supposed to rehabilitate people and reintegrate them into society, becomes a nail.


What makes Trumpism unique isn't its corruption but its brazenness, essentially bragging that governance is just business by other means, that elected office should become a vehicle for private enrichment, and that human suffering is acceptable if it generates the right quarterly return.

--p78. Given that Trump has the court and police force controlled, who is going to punish him for violating the laws? Heck, he can probably ask his cronies to rewrite the law so that previously illegal dealings are not permitted. Laws without enforcement are just toilet paper.


Where previous politicians lied to cover mistakes, Trump used lies as a central governing tool to shape reality itself, to build a cult of personality immune to contradictory facts, and to systematically destroy accountability mechanisms that might constrain his power.

--p83.


Unless this machinery of lies (and the Supreme Court decision that helped create it) is confronted and dismantled, we all face a dystopian future where elections still happen but losers never concede, facts never overcome intentional fictions, and where (like in so many banana republics) democracy exists in name only.

--p93. I am more pessimistic than that. I think the dystopian future is already here; we are living in it. I don't even think there will be a clear moment of its arrival (maybe Trump's second term was the announcement); we will just witness Republicans win all the important elections from now on.


The US Elections Assistance Commission (an official government agency) data tell us the damning story: a staggering 4.7 million voters were purged from the voter rolls before the election, all on the false claim of "voter fraud," something so rare that you're more likely to be hit by lightning than to ever encounter it.

--p99.


First, they used what my old friend reporter Greg Palast calls "Poison Postcards": official-looking mail sent to targeted voters. When Georgians (especially young, poor, and Black or Hispanic voters) didn't return these postcards (which were designed to look like junk mail), they were removed from voter rolls, a purging process that five Republicans on the Supreme Court legalized in 2018 with the Husted decision.

--p100. Another form of "poll tax", but smarter and more nefarious.


The nasty little secret of American democracy is that we don't count all the votes. Nor do we let every citizen vote. Because America is the only advanced democracy in the world where voting is a privilege rather than a right of citizenship.

--p102.


When career civil servants dedicated to following the law are replaced with political loyalists dedicated only to following orders, the rule of law itself is at risk, as well as the competence of government.

--p111. This is WAI, according to Project 2025.


State legislatures are being encouraged to override popular votes if they don't like the results.

--p133. There you go, they don't even need gerrymandering or new forms of poll tax to manipulate the vote. They can simply ignore the popular votes.


In July 2022, CPAC met in Budapest, with Viktor Orbán receiving a standing ovation from declaring that if the GOP wanted real power they had to seize control of the media, the courts, and embark on institutional restructuring.

--p135.


The endgame isn't conservatism. It isn't, in fact, policy at all. It's a complete restructuring of American governance to ensure permanent rule by a single leader and party. It's the potential end of the American experiment in regular and peaceful transfer of political power.

--p139. I cannot believe that after escaping a one-party-rule society, I would dive right into another soon-to-be one-party-rule society.


A nation without empathy isn't really a nation at all; it's just a crime syndicate with a flag and army, a conspiracy to use the powers of government -- the only institution that can legally deprive us of our freedom or even our lives -- to elevate the powerful while crushing the weak.

--p143.


The American experiment has always been, at multiple levels, a contradiction: founded on principles of freedom while practicing slavery, promising equality while enforcing segregation, celebrating democracy while denying the vote to millions. But what has kept our American experiment -- the first in the history of the civilized world -- alive is our willingness, however halting and imperfect, to confront these contradictions and nonetheless (or even because of them) strive toward that more perfect union that our Constitution's preamble promises.

--p160-161
Profile Image for Mal Warwick.
Author 32 books493 followers
October 22, 2025
A savage takedown of the would-be dictator in the Oval Office

Amazon lists more than 3,000 books about Donald Trump, and I feel as though I’ve read most of them. (Well, at least 23, anyway.) So, why do we need yet another one? Of course, he’s now well into his second term, and a lot has happened since January 20, 2025. A whole lot. So there’s that. But it also turns out that, despite all I’ve learned from extensive reading about our 47th President, there is more to know. And author and radio personality Thom Hartmann proves the point in his shocking new book, The Last American President. It’s a lucid and timely takedown of Donald Trump.

A deeply disturbing psychological and political profile of the President

Hartmann has been an unflinching critic of Donald Trump since his first appearance in the political arena. And no wonder: the man pushes all his buttons. Trump is, after all, demonstrably a pathological liar. He is a serial sexual offender, guilty of corrupt business practices, and a failure in his chosen field of real estate whose companies filed for bankruptcy six times. (Hartmann himself is a serial entrepreneur who has built at least half a dozen businesses.) But we know all this. It’s come to light in many of those 3,000 books about the man.

What Hartmann contributes is not more of the same but a psychological and political profile of Donald Trump that burrows deeply into available records that others have missed or failed to acknowledge. If you already think you’ve got the measure of the man, Hartmann will show you aspects of his record and his personality that others haven’t brought clearly into the light.

One major takeaway

Most of the material in Hartmann’s book is familiar to anyone who has tracked Donald Trump’s career for many years. (Or, as I have, read a great many books and articles about him.) But there are exceptions. And the standout is Chapter 8, “The Heist of Democracy.”

As Hartmann notes, just about everybody in America accepts the claim that Trump won the 2024 presidential election fairly and decisively. Hartmann demurs. “The corporate media keeps telling us that Donald Trump won the 2024 election fair and square. They’re almost certainly wrong: Joe Biden was, in my opinion, the last fairly elected American president.” To back up this assertion, Hartmann cites the work of investigative journalist Greg Palast, who details the many steps Trump’s campaign and the Republican Party did to prevent likely Democratic voters from casting their ballots. Here’s the gist of it . . .

Donald Trump did NOT win in 2024 “fair and square”
“if all legal voters had been allowed to vote and if all the legal ballots had been counted, Kamala Harris would have won Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Georgia. . . A staggering 4.7 million voters were purged from the voter rolls before the election, all on the false claim of ‘voter fraud,’ something so rare that you’re more likely to be hit by lightning than to ever encounter it. . . [And] a state audit in Washington, for example, found Black voters were four times more likely than white voters to have their mail-in ballots rejected. And that pattern repeated nationwide.”

Voter suppression sank Kamala Harris’ campaign
“When we apply the most conservative calculation to these numbers,” Hartmann goes on, “the suppression factor in 2024 was at least 2.3 percent of the vote. That translates to approximately 3,565,000 votes that, largely, should have gone to Kamala Harris. With those ballots properly counted, she would have topped Trump’s official total by 1.2 million and won the Electoral College with 286 votes.”

This chapter, at the least, should be required reading in every American government or introductory political science course. It shows how badly damaged the machinery of America’s democracy had become even before Donald Trump took office on January 20, 2025.

Summary of this book by artificial intelligence

If you’ve been reading my reviews over recent months, you’ll be aware that I now often turn to the AI chatbot Claude for help. (I’m now using the upgraded Version Sonnet 4.5,) Here, once again, I’m including Claude’s summary of the book I’m reviewing. It’s verbatim, although I’ve deleted the sometimes lengthy URLs that link to Claude’s sources and added subheads to break up the text.

Be assured. What follows is accurate in every respect. There are no “hallucinations” here.

An analysis of American democracy today
The Last American President: A Broken Man, a Corrupt Party, and a World on the Brink presents progressive talk show host Thom Hartmann’s analysis of American democracy, arguing that Donald Trump represents not an aberration but rather the predictable outcome of systemic failures. The book examines how wealthy elites, political cowardice, and institutional decay created conditions enabling Trump’s authoritarian rise.

Hartmann explores Trump’s psychological formation, tracing how childhood trauma, pathological narcissism, and calculated cruelty shaped him into what the author characterizes as an authoritarian leader. The investigation details how Fred Trump’s harsh parenting style and mentorship from attorney Roy Cohn taught Trump that kindness equals weakness and that power means never apologizing.

An unholy alliance yielded Trump’s ascendancy
The book exposes what Hartmann calls an “unholy alliance” between Trump’s damaged psychology and America’s deteriorating institutions. He argues that the Republican Party abandoned its principles for power while billionaire donors treated democracy as a profit-generating enterprise, essentially manufacturing the conditions for authoritarianism. Drawing on his background as both a psychotherapist and political scientist, Hartmann analyzes Trump as a pathological narcissist

Beyond examining Trump’s past, the book warns about America’s future, particularly concerning climate catastrophe and the global spread of fascism. Hartmann presents what he describes as a nightmare scenario in which a second Trump term could not only end American democracy but also trigger irreversible environmental damage. He contends that political cowardice and corporate greed have created a perfect storm threatening humanity’s survival.

A wake-up call about control by an oligarchy
Hartmann frames the book as a wake-up call, asserting that America faces its most critical moment for democracy since the Civil War. Rather than presenting mere political commentary, he positions his work as an urgent alarm about reaching a point of no return. The book examines the infrastructure of money and political power built over decades that Hartmann believes aims to transform America into an oligarchy, providing both historical analysis and warnings about the future of American democratic institutions.

About the author

Wikipedia characterizes Thom Hartmann as an American radio personality, author, businessman, and progressive political commentator. He has written dozens of books and has built a career on radio and television since 2003. He was born in Grand Rapids, Michigan, in 1951 and majored in electrical engineering at Michigan State University. While active in the anti-Vietnam war movement, he built the first of several successful businesses. Hartmann published his first book in 1992. He has three children with his wife Louise.
Profile Image for Derek.
Author 6 books94 followers
August 6, 2025
Thom Hartmann is one of today’s most important writers documenting the challenges facing US democracy. The Last American President, which chronicles Donald Trump’s long ascension to power, may be his most consequential work.

Hartmann details many items that I’d previously learned about at the one inch level, but takes you ten inches deep into the subject. Trump’s long affection and worship of Roy Cohn is one example. I hadn’t known, for instance, that as a federal prosecutor, Cohn pressured Ethel Rosenberg’s brother to provide false testimony against her, which lead to her execution. Nor did I know Cohn was a key figure in orchestrating McCarthyism’s character assassinations. Trump’s idolization of Cohn, and his own contemporary demagoguery, made a lot more sense after Hartmann’s revelations.

Hartmann further recounts how Trumpism was a logical, perhaps inevitable trajectory for the 21st century Republican Party built on Nixon’s southern strategy, Reagan’s fictional welfare queens, Tea Party astroturf, all then juiced by the Citizens United ruling.

The Last American President details many flaws in the 2024 election, which have been previously documented and are well footnoted. For instance:

* Over 2.1 million mail-in ballots were disqualified for minor clerical errors.
* 585,000 in-person ballots were thrown out.
* 1.2 million “provisional” ballots were rejected without being counted.
* 3.2 million new voter registrations were rejected or not processed in time.

Hartmann calculates this amounted to 2.3 percent of the vote, or 3,565,000 votes that he says “largely should have gone to Kamala Harris.”

As someone who has spent a lot of time studying election administration and voting rights, I agree with Hartmann’s accounting of votes that should have been counted, but weren’t. I’m less certain that these votes would necessarily have gone to Harris. We know from exit polling and voter turnout analysis that Trump made significant gains among Latino men, young voters, and low-propensity/low-information voters in 2024 compared to previous elections. These are often the same demographics disenfranchised by the voter suppression tactics Hartmann accurately details. Given Democratic gains among wealthier, well-educated voters who once leaned Republican (think Mitt Romney supporters) and Trump’s inroads into what was once the Democratic base, analysists on both the left and right might reconsider who actually benefits from suppression of infrequent voters.

It would be easy to conclude both from the book’s provocative title, and the structural issues leading up to Trumpism, that Hartmann is pessimistic about our future. And perhaps he is.

Yet if I’m right in my hunch that voter suppression tactics might blow up in Republican’s faces like an exploding cigar, maybe there is some reason for hope that their plans may backfire.
Hartmann quotes Mahatma Gandhi at opening of Part 3: “Remember that all through history, there have been tyrants and murderers, and for a time, they seem invincible. But in the end, they always fall. Always."

He further notes in the conclusion that there have been dirty tricks in politics before. Nixon’s deal with South Vietnam to boycott peace talks. Reagan’s deal with Ayatollah Khomeini to keep holding American hostages until he took office. Bush v Gore. Trump’s hiding hush money payments to Stormy Daniels. And yet they didn’t always work. Despite these dirty tricks and serious flaws in the fairness of our elections, we elected Presidents Carter, Clinton, Obama, and Biden.

Hartmann ends with hope, saying “It’s time to break this pattern and finally hold at least one (convicted) criminal Republican president accountable.” I for one, believe that is possible and that we haven’t yet seen the last American President.
Profile Image for Richard Derus.
4,317 reviews2,308 followers
January 21, 2026
Rating: 3* of five

The Publisher Says: From bestselling progressive talk show host Thom Hartmann comes an urgent autopsy of American democracy, showing how plutocrats, political cowardice, and systemic rot built the perfect runway for Trump's authoritarian ascent.

The Last American President rips open America's wounded democracy to expose a terrifying Donald Trump isn't an anomaly—he's the inevitable product of a system engineered to fail. This searing investigation reveals how a man forged by childhood trauma, pathological narcissism, and calculated cruelty didn't hijack democracy—he was handed the keys by those who should have been its guardians.

Hartmann uncovers the unholy alliance between Trump's damaged psyche and America's rotted institutions. From Fred Trump's brutal parenting to Roy Cohn's lessons in shamelessness, from a Republican Party that traded principles for power to billionaire donors who treated democracy as a profit center, this book exposes the assembly line that manufactured an authoritarian.

But this is about more than Trump's past—it's about America's future. As climate catastrophe accelerates and fascism spreads globally, Hartmann reveals the nightmare a second Trump term that doesn't just end American democracy but also triggers irreversible planetary damage. Through meticulous research and unflinching analysis, he shows how political cowardice and corporate greed created the perfect storm that could extinguish humanity's last chance at survival.

This isn't just political commentary—it's a last-minute alarm sounding before the point of no return.

I RECEIVED A DRC FROM THE PUBLISHER VIA EDELWEISS+. THANK YOU.

My Review
: At 40% I was reading about Giuliani's deceptively edited videos of the Georgia election workers from 2020, and realized, "I am just rehearsing my nuclear-grade hatred of this cabal of rotten-souled kakistocrats," and called the time of death for this read. I was not learning new-to-me facts; the analysis was wanting fresh insights; I was paying attention as it happened, so this was not the read for me.

Younger or less fully engaged readers might not know the facts presented here, so will derive more from reading the book. It is unabashedly tendentious, which I fully approve of and support. Gifting to your freshly jarred into alertness family members is an excellent idea...it has a message and delivers it. Hard.

Berrett-Koehler Publishers charges $24.95 no matter which edition you buy. Helping someone catch up to the existential threat to the US is worth it in my eyes.
Profile Image for Jo Gilley.
383 reviews4 followers
February 9, 2026
Hartmann explains how Trump became who he is -- learning from his father and Roy Cohn that dominating is the most important thing, deny any wrongdoing, make up your reality and stick to it.

And how Citizens United handed our elections, and our government, to the wealthy.

It's all pretty devastating, but chapter 8 was the most horrifying. I knew some of the facts, but had never seen the breadth of the voter suppression in 2024 summarized in one place:
"The story is actually fairly straightforward: if all legal voters had been allowed to vote and if all the legal ballots had been counted, Kamala Harris would have won Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Georgia. Instead of a second Trump administration, Harris would have become our president with 286 electoral votes. The US Elections Assistance Commission (an official government agency) data tell us the damning story: a staggering 4.7 million voters were purged from the voter rolls before the election, all on the false claim of “voter fraud,” something so rare that you’re more likely to be hit by lightning than to ever encounter it.
1. By August 2024, self-proclaimed “vigilante” vote “fraud hunters” had challenged the eligibility of 317,886 voters across multiple states.
2. When Election Day arrived, millions more were disenfranchised; the Georgia NAACP, for example, estimates challenges exceeded 200,000 people whose right to vote was stripped from them months before the election in Georgia alone.
3. Over 2.1 million mail-in ballots were disqualified for minor clerical errors.
4. 585,000 in-person ballots were thrown out.
5. 1.2 million “provisional” (what I call “placebo”) ballots were rejected without being counted.
6. 3.2 million new voter registrations were rejected or not processed in time.
7. And here’s the true obscenity: these rejections weren’t random. A state audit in Washington, for example, found Black voters were four times more likely than white voters to have their mail-in ballots rejected. That pattern repeated nationwide. In Florida, North Carolina, and Georgia, analyses showed that officials flagged Black voters’ mail ballots at more than twice the rate of white voters’ ballots."

139 reviews
January 24, 2026
Hartmann brilliantly summarizes a ton of information into a clear-eyed distillation of how the US has come to teeter on the precipice of losing even the veneer of democracy, let alone holding meaningful elections ever again. He makes an impassioned plea for little "d" democracy and the morality and dignity that should be inherent in how we attempt to govern ourselves. I have no problem in Hartmann labeling the Great Depression as the Republican Great Depression. The culpable should face the music. Hartmann also rightly blames Republicans for their abject enabling of Trump and their decades-long history of stealing elections through voter suppression, gerrymandering, and removing thousands of people of color from voting rolls. Alas, there is so little accountability in the upper reaches (but paradoxically lowers depths) of US society.

My politics mostly align with Hartmann's. My only quibble is that he didn't sufficiently address, in my estimation at least, the not inconsiderable truckling and enabling perpetrated by the entrenched leaders of the Democratic Party. More folks like Ro Khanna, Cori Bush, Bernie Sanders, Zohran Mamdani, Ilhan Omar, Kshama Sawant, AOC, et al. are needed (while casting off Chuck Schumer, Hakeem Jeffries, and Nancy Pelosi). He lets some Dems off the hook by not acknowledging their corrupt complicity. The billionaire oligarchs haven't bought off just one party. Also omitted is the fear rife among Republican and some Democratic congressional politicians of the gun-toting MAGA folks and assorted J6ers roaming the land. Republicans are far more liable for the morass in which we find ourselves but Democrats have also chosen power and profits over people in far too many circumstances. Hartmann at least urges the rest of us to make hope a discipline and to enact daily, weekly, and monthly acts of democracy to fight the madness raining down, and reigning, upon us. Invoking Margaret Mead's famous quote about the actions of a small group of people is never a bad idea as a call to creative, nonviolent arms, either.
Profile Image for Bargain Sleuth Book Reviews.
1,646 reviews19 followers
November 28, 2025
Thanks to Edelweiss and Berrett-Koehler Publishers for the digital copy of this book; I am leaving this review voluntarily.

I didn’t even realize that Thom Hartman was the writer of this book until I finally sat down to read it. I’d been listening to him on the only progressive talk radio station in my area (until the owners changed the format back to oldies, grrr.) But I digress. Hartman has always been very clear about his politics, and now, he’s breaking down the hows and whys the United States is in our current predicament.

I’m not going to hash out everything, but let’s just say that Hartman reveals who and what has pushed an authoritarian regime into power in America. Every day I find out more and more about the people and corporations behind all the worst policies and politicians, and it’s truly frightening.

The regime wants people to be uninformed and uneducated. That way, they can manipulate people into believing their lies and talking points. We’re seeing it now with the government shutdown; Republicans call it the Democratic Party shutdown, when the Republicans control both the executive and legislative bodies of federal government. Right now, I believe the government shutdown was part of the plan. And it gets more frightening every day.

This deep dive into plutocratic rot and the rise of authoritarian power needs to be seen by more eyes.
Profile Image for Ava Courtney Sylvester.
160 reviews3 followers
September 25, 2025
Read this book. Save the country.

I think I highlighted over 90% of this book, and I’m screenshotting and sharing bits and blurbs with anyone who will listen.

From the first pages I was enraptured, eschewing sleep to read just a little more in this vivid and vital masterpiece. I’ve read over a hundred books on the cultural divide in this country and the rise and rule of Trump, but never have I seen the variables that have led to our current crisis woven together with such insight and urgency. It’s like all those hundreds of books—from “Dark Money” to “On Tyranny” and more—are condensed here in one book.

Thom Hartmann posits that just one man cannot topple a democracy: it takes an upbringing inculcating a fragile narcissism, a society that conflates television with reality and worships at its altar, and a power structure that would sacrifice its deepest values for the pursuit of power at any price. In this book, he explores what made Trump into the man who might be out last freely elected president, how we got into a place where we may lose our democracy, and what we might still be able to do to keep our country.

Now, if you’ll excuse me, I have a lot of refrigerators to plaster with printouts from this book.
1 review
December 23, 2025
A cursory—and honestly mediocre—review of Trump’s development, the systems in place that allowed his rise, and the transition to autocratic control in America. I learned nothing really new, and at times the writing felt incredibly repetitive, with the author using the same “catchphrase” (or variants of it) to hammer a point that read almost like AI slop. Sometimes Hartmann is almost there when he makes a point, then falls flat on his face with the same superficial talking point, and always refers back to previous chapters, which, in my opinion, insults the reader's intelligence. Overall, there are plenty of better options available if one wants to read more about Trump, the GOP, and the ambition to install American autocracy.
Profile Image for Mhorg.
Author 11 books12 followers
December 18, 2025
Horrifying and informative

I'll start my review with a warning; this book is horrifying. More horrifying than anything Stephen King or his fellow horror authors have ever written. I'm a fast reader but I had to read this in spurts or it might have broken my mind. I'm not kidding. I urge everyone to read this and to organize before this maniac and his sycophants destroy this country. While the author ends this with hope, this lunatic and his element can be stopped; it will take work. The first part: intelligent people need to READ THIS BOOK. I'm not kidding. It's horrifying and an eye opener. Don't just take my word for it; read it. Please.
Profile Image for Jeremiah.
168 reviews6 followers
Read
December 30, 2025
Accurate and yet incomplete and not insightful in diagnosing two Trump elections. To say that Biden is the last legitimate President falls into the Republican narrative of stolen elections instead of answer why did millions of Americans vote for Trump? Why did Harris perform even worse than Biden and Clinton with black and brown voters? How did identity politics hobble the Democratic party and cause them to lose focus on winning with uneducated American voters. When considering the climate issue you also have to recognize that the housing crisis has been exacerbated by decades of under building enabled by laws such as CEQA.
7 reviews
January 18, 2026
Decent look into a lot of the Trump administration’s corruption. Although, there is a noticeable lack of mentioning Israel or Trump’s overt corruption with Netanyahu. I think the author’s biases are very easy to see in both this omission and his overtly emotional language. I think his message would have been strengthened had his writing style remained more professional and journalistic and less Twitter rant. He also repeats himself A LOT.

An incomplete and drawn-out, but somewhat informative look into Donald Trump’s corruption. 2/5
Profile Image for Alexandra.
781 reviews36 followers
December 26, 2025
Agree with the sentiment but this was just not a good book. Written with weirdly familiar tone while trying to be academic and largely an ad for his radio show. Bugged the fuck out of me how he kept saying “Me and Louise said this…” or “Me and Louise did this..” as if his wife is in any way a part of the narrative.
31 reviews
January 3, 2026
Truth is best

This book tells the truth, and lays out all of the proof in citations and sources. It’s a wonderful and frightening read. The author lays it out in a way to make it easy to understand and easy to remember. It’s amazing how we’ve gotten this far, I just hope that we can recover in the end. This is a wonderful warning, and a wake up call.
Profile Image for Sue.
586 reviews3 followers
December 19, 2025
I think this is a great primer book for people who don't really know how we've reached this point in our political scene. The reason for 3 stars instead of 4 is because I think the author could have (and should have) gone into greater depth. I learned very little new.
Profile Image for Kathleen Woodcock.
341 reviews5 followers
December 31, 2025
Well worth the listen on Audible to discover that Democracy has been threatened since the Reagan Era. Learn how Trump became the ‘Con Man’ he is and also how he did not win the 2024 election! Democracy needs to be fought for and the time is NOW!
27 reviews1 follower
February 3, 2026
Well writen

Thom explains everything on a level you can understand. You can read for several hours and stay focused and interested. I enjoyed the book and recommend it to others interested in the present political environment.
34 reviews
October 18, 2025
A Stark Warning: Will We Listen?

Why Is the Greatest Democracy in Our World on Life Support? How Can We Be That Support? Thom Hartmann Prescribes How We Can Be Its Solution!
Profile Image for Susan.
9 reviews1 follower
November 5, 2025
This book is *guaranteed* to make the banned book lists in some states. Because…oof. Great book about a horrible reality.
Profile Image for Garret Rose.
399 reviews1 follower
January 21, 2026
What started out as a strong and viable argument, quickly moved into opinion, rantings, and euphemistic claims.
Profile Image for Elizabeth.
47 reviews
February 8, 2026
Clear, concise summary of recent events/politics in the age of DJT.
Profile Image for Carol Wahl.
5 reviews
March 22, 2026
The Last A.erican President

Always enjoyed listening to Thom Hartmann and his political and social commentary. Interesting and inciteful as well. A grim prediction of our future.
5 reviews
December 31, 2025
Eye opening. Some behind the scenes information that explains much of today's MAGA beliefs
Displaying 1 - 30 of 30 reviews

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