The ex-president recently hosted the Hungarian kleptocrat, whom heā€™s called a ā€˜strong manā€™ and a real ā€˜bossā€™, at Mar-a-Lago

Donald Trump has not only run the Republican primaries like an incumbent, but on occasion, he gets to play-act the role of president right at home. On Friday, he hosted Viktor OrbĆ”n, the Hungarian prime minister, for a quasi-state visit at his Mar-a-Lago estate, described by discerning critics as ā€œthe palace of a CEO-president-king, done up in the opulent dictator-chic favored by third-world kleptocratsā€.

OrbĆ”n has spent the past 14 years making his country into a kleptocratic autocracy right in the middle of the European Union. Obviously, Trump does not need general guidance from OrbĆ”n; he is already endowed with authoritarian instincts. But, for all the obvious differences between OrbĆ”nā€™s small European nation and the US, OrbĆ”nā€™s rule holds concrete lessons which the American right is ready to adopt. Given the excitement with which Trump acolytes have been promoting OrbĆ”n ā€“ and their frequent pilgrimages to Budapest as the capital of ā€œnational conservatismā€ ā€“ Hungary offers a preview of a second Trump term.

Lesson number one: if you want to control the country, you must completely control your own party. After losing two successive national elections at the beginning of this century, it looked like OrbĆ”nā€™s career might be finished. Instead, he managed to govern his Fidesz party with an iron grip. It is not an accident that far-right populist leaders everywhere treat their parties as personal vehicles, with no real internal debates, let alone dissent, tolerated.