Friday, March 20, 2026
Fascist Move of the Day
Trump-appointed panel approves a 24-karat gold coin bearing his image — routing around the federal law that prohibits living presidents on currency. "I think the president likes big things."
Source: The Guardian, March 19 2026
Historical Parallel
In 1926, Mussolini ordered that the Italian lira be redesigned with his image. By 1927, his face appeared on coins, stamps, public buildings, schools, and train stations across Italy. This was not vanity — or rather, it was not only vanity. It was statecraft. When the leader's face becomes a literal unit of exchange, the distinction between the person and the state dissolves. The coin in your pocket is not just money. It is a declaration: I am the country. Augustus understood this in Rome. Napoleon understood it in France. Franco, Mao, Saddam — every authoritarian who wanted to become synonymous with the nation began by putting their face on the money.
Federal law explicitly prohibits the image of a living president from appearing on US currency. The Commission of Fine Arts — whose members were all appointed by Trump earlier this year — voted to approve the coin anyway, routing around the statute by classifying it as a "commemorative" rather than "currency." The treasury secretary authorized it. Trump personally approved the design. A commissioner who serves as a White House aide said: "I think the president likes big things." Another commissioner — the architect of Trump's $90 million White House ballroom addition — advocated for the largest possible coin size. The panel that approved the coin works for the man on the coin.
"As we approach our 250th birthday, we are thrilled to prepare coins that represent the enduring spirit of our country and democracy, and there is no profile more emblematic for the front of such coins than that of our serving president, Donald J Trump."
— US Treasurer Brandon Beach, March 19 2026Sources: Wikipedia: Cult of Personality — Mussolini · USHMM — Propaganda and the Cult of the Leader
The Full Dispatch
On Thursday, the US Commission of Fine Arts voted without objection to approve a 24-karat gold commemorative coin bearing Donald Trump's image. The coin depicts Trump in a suit, leaning forward with fists on a desk, the word "Liberty" arched above his head. It is being produced by the US Mint to mark America's 250th anniversary on July 4, 2026. Federal law says no living president can appear on US currency. The panel's solution: call it a "commemorative coin" rather than currency, and have the treasury secretary — a Trump appointee — authorize it under an alternate statutory provision. Every member of the commission was appointed by Trump earlier this year. Two of the commissioners who voted to approve it work in the White House.
The cult of the leader's image is one of the most thoroughly documented patterns in authoritarian governance, and it follows a consistent logic. The leader's face on the coin is not a portrait. It is a claim of ownership. When Mussolini stamped his image on the lira, the message to every Italian who handled money was subliminal and constant: the state and the man are the same thing. The coin doesn't say "Benito Mussolini." It says "Italy." And the face on it says: I am Italy. Augustus Caesar pioneered this technique two thousand years ago — the denarius bearing his profile circulated throughout the Roman Empire not as a tribute to the emperor but as a physical reminder that every economic transaction happened under his authority and within his domain.
The details of the approval process are more revealing than the coin itself. Chamberlain Harris, who voted to approve the design, is a special assistant to the president and deputy director of the Oval Office. She sits on a federal arts commission. She works for the man whose face is on the coin, and she voted to approve the coin. James McCrery II, another commissioner, is the architect who designed the $90 million White House ballroom addition that Trump commissioned and the same commission approved last month. The commission that oversees federal aesthetics is staffed by people whose careers depend on the president's favor. The coin they approved was personally selected by the president. This is not an independent review. It is a loyalty demonstration disguised as an art critique.
The 250th anniversary of the United States — a celebration of the founding of a republic explicitly designed to prevent the concentration of power in a single person — will now be commemorated with a gold coin bearing the face of a living president who has attacked the courts, threatened the press, bypassed Congress to wage war, and stacked the commission that approved his own portrait. The US Treasurer called Trump's image "the most emblematic profile" for a coin celebrating American democracy. The law says a living president's face cannot appear on currency. The response was not to follow the law. It was to reclassify the object until the law no longer applied. That instinct — the reflexive routing around legal constraints that inconvenience the leader — is not a quirk of process. It is the defining characteristic of the regime.
The Playbook
Leader's face on currency — collapse the distinction between person and state → Route around the law that prohibits it → Staff the approving body with loyalists → Frame it as patriotism — celebrating the nation by celebrating the leader → The leader becomes the state; the state becomes the leader