The newer democracies—the Philippines, Turkey, Tunisia, Argentina, Russia, for example—find it hard to maintain their democracy against strong men like Putin.
The United States is one of the oldest democracies, but even this country struggles against undemocratic trends.
From an article by H. David Baer:
“ . . . ancient tyrants used their rule to pursue private gain with complete disregard for the common good. In Aristotle’s view, tyrannical regimes, dedicated as they were to personal self-aggrandizement, combined the worst features of democracy and oligarchy (Politics, Book V 1311a10).
“Like democratic leaders, the tyrant appeals to the people, but he does so through self-serving demagoguery. The tyrant’s true aim is that of an oligarch, namely, the accumulation of wealth. So, too, in our time, modern autocrats employ populist strategies to disguise the kleptocracies they create, which they use to accumulate massive personal fortunes. “
(H. David Baer: (“The Return of the Tyrants and the Price of Democracy”; The Cresset; Trinity, 2018.)