With the headline "Donald Trump: the would be king,"
The Economist wrote, "Mr Trump’s every act demonstrates his belief that power is vested in him personally, and affirms that he is bent on amassing more...However, government is about means as well as ends, and here Mr Trump’s critics are right to be alarmed. Bureaucratic shock therapy will bring a lot of harm before it does any good. Subjecting public servants to purity and loyalty tests will politicise the technicalities of running a complex modern economy. Subordinating justice to presidential whim corrupts the rule of law. His peace plan for Gaza would force Palestinians into permanent exile, a denial of their most fundamental rights. In each case Mr Trump has displayed wanton cruelty. Unfortunately, that is also a way of acquiring power—because humiliation embodies the idea that might is right."