MeidasTouch host Ben Meiselas reports on Vice President Kamala Harris delivering her first major public speech since the election and Meiselas highlights other Democrats who are fighting back against Trump.
While no one can formally diagnose someone with Narcissistic Personality Disorder (NPD) without a professional evaluation, many psychologists and mental health experts—based on public behavior and statements—have described Donald Trump as displaying strong narcissistic traits.
🧠 What Is Narcissism?
Narcissistic Personality Disorder (NPD) is defined by the DSM-5 as a mental condition with traits such as:
- Grandiosity and inflated sense of self-importance
- Constant need for admiration
- Lack of empathy for others
- A sense of entitlement
- Exploitative behavior in relationships
📌 Traits Donald Trump Commonly Displays (Publicly):
| Trait | Examples from Trump’s Public Life |
|---|---|
| Grandiosity | “I alone can fix it.” / “Nobody knows more than me.” |
| Need for admiration | Constant praise of his ratings, polls, and business success |
| Lack of empathy | Dismissive comments during crises or about critics |
| Sensitivity to criticism | Frequent attacks on media and detractors, calling them “losers” or “enemies” |
| Exploiting relationships | Loyalty tests among allies, turning on people who cross him |
🗣️ What Experts Say:
- In 2017, 27 mental health professionals published The Dangerous Case of Donald Trump, arguing that he showed signs of malignant narcissism, a more extreme form of narcissism with antisocial traits.
- Dr. John Gartner, a psychologist, said Trump fits the profile of someone with NPD and sociopathic features.
- The American Psychiatric Association discourages “diagnosing at a distance,” but public debate remains ongoing.
⚠️ Important Note:
- Having narcissistic traits ≠ NPD diagnosis.
- Many successful leaders show narcissistic behavior to some degree—confidence, charisma, dominance—but that doesn’t always mean clinical disorder.
💡 Bottom Line:
Trump very likely displays narcissistic traits, based on his behavior and speech patterns. Whether it rises to the level of a clinical disorder is a matter of debate and would require formal evaluation by a licensed mental health professional.
Would you like a comparison of narcissistic traits in other public figures for context?
Great question — the U.S. national debt is over $34 trillion, and we owe it to a combination of domestic and foreign creditors. Here’s a breakdown of who actually holds the debt: