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Autocrats: Can they bend without breaking?

Three of the world’s most prominent autocrats – Chinese leader Xi Jinping, Russian President Vladimir Putin, and Iranian Ayatollah Ali Khamenei – are currently facing a shared dilemma: how to change course on a core policy without imperiling the aura of all-knowingness and political invulnerability on which their power ultimately rests.

Mr. Xi is abandoning his “zero-COVID” policy in the face of popular unrest, Ayatollah Khamenei is under heavy pressure from women demanding changes to their dress code, and Mr. Putin is finding his invasion of Ukraine unpopular at home.

Why We Wrote This

Are autocracies all their leaders crack them up to be? How do strongmen change their policies without puncturing the auras of omniscience on which their power rests?

Autocracies lack the institutional checks that shape policy decisions in democracies, such as public opinion, independent news media, open debate, and robust opposition parties. Autocrats make their decisions alone, or with a narrow group of advisers.

If those decisions go wrong, they call into question the power, judgment, and political interests of a single person.

The challenges Messrs. Xi, Putin, and Khamenei are facing could be altering the terms of what U.S. President Joe Biden has called the central narrative of 21st
-century world politics: the struggle between autocracy and democracy.

Perhaps one old democrat, Britain’s Winston Churchill, was right when he quipped that “democracy is the worst form of government, except for all those other forms that have been tried.”

It is the strongman leader’s nightmare conundrum: how to change course on a core policy without imperiling the aura of omniscience and political invulnerability on which his power ultimately rests.

And that’s now a problem for three of the world’s most firmly embedded autocrats – Chinese leader Xi Jinping, Russian President Vladimir Putin, and Iranian Ayatollah Ali Khamenei

They may well find a way out of their current policy predicaments and defuse the popular discontent making itself felt even in their tightly policed countries.

Why We Wrote This

Are autocracies all their leaders crack them up to be? How do strongmen change their policies without puncturing the auras of omniscience on which their power rests?

But the challenge they are facing could be altering the terms of what U.S. President Joe Biden has called the central narrative of 21st
-century world politics: the struggle between autocracy and democracy.

As recently as 10 months ago, at a summit held days before Mr. Putin rolled his tanks into Ukraine, he and Mr. Xi were confidently promoting the advantages of their brand of nationalist autocracy over what they saw as the West’s flaccid, flailing democracies.

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