Donald Trump's seemingly quirky obsession with gifting ill-fitting shoes to his Cabinet members is far more sinister than it appears— a calculated ritual of humiliation designed to reinforce authoritarian control over his inner circle, according to analysts who study cult psychology and authoritarian tactics.
Columnist Chauncey DeVega, writing for Salon, argues that Trump's habit of distributing $145 Florsheim leather Oxfords to favored advisers functions as a "loyalty oath" embedded within a larger pattern of public degradation and dominance.
The details are deliberately cruel. Photos show Secretary of State Marco Rubio's gifted shoes are dramatically oversized for his feet — a humiliation Trump compounds by mocking officials about the size of their feet and what it supposedly implies about their sexual potency. Trump clearly knows the shoes don't fit, the columnist wrote. The point is precisely that they don't.
"If Trump can dictate how the world's most powerful men dress and behave, he can go even further — controlling their minds and emotions," DeVega wrote. "This is what total authoritarian control over a society looks like in practice."
Stephen Hassan, one of the world's leading experts on cult psychology and author of "The Cult of Trump," traced the strategy back to classic authoritarian manipulation. "True believers — the people who give everything to the cult — are psychologically and emotionally programmed and trained, where your real identity is suppressed by the cult identity that's in the image of the cult leader," Hassan explained. "The cult followers are to think like, feel like, and walk like the cult leader."
The shoe ritual mirrors tactics deployed by historical dictators, according to DeVega. Stalin demanded endless applause from subordinates — stopping too soon meant prison or death. He also forced senior Communist Party officials to dance on command. His successor Nikita Khrushchev later recalled being forced to perform the gopak at Stalin's whim. "I had to squat and kick my heels out, which, frankly, was not easy for me. But when Stalin says 'play,' a wise man plays."
Trump's Cabinet members, meanwhile, publicly pretend the humiliation doesn't bother them, maintaining their roles as "clownish sycophants" who praise Trump in meetings as "the greatest president in American history — unrivaled, they say, in intelligence and leadership," DeVega wrote.

