If Power Corrupts, What Do We Have Here?" Trump's "profound inner emptiness" [View all]
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/13/opinion/trump-presidential-power-addiction.html?unlocked_article_code=1.EFA.0YWN.sokz8ZkqbTEz&smid=url-share
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 Trumps targets for subjugation are spiraling ever upward.
I asked Manfred Kets de Vries, a professor of leadership development and organizational change at Insead, an international business school, about Trumps relationship with power.
He 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.