Donald Trump and MAGA loyalists may scoff at the charge that he’s a fascist, but let’s face it: He at least offers a remarkably good imitation.

Retired Gen. Mark A. Milley, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff under Trump, is quoted in a new book by journalist Bob Woodward, of Watergate fame, describing the former president as “fascist to the core.” Trump’s longest-serving chief of staff, John Kelly, recently said the former president fits “the general definition of fascist.”

That mention of the f-word struck me as a startling violation of the unofficial but widely embraced political etiquette that sees the word as too volatile for public use, even though Trump has used the word — and just about every other word that grabs his fancy — against Harris.

Using the word to describe one’s rivals can come with political risk. Just as the Anti-Defamation League has discouraged the practice of calling anyone “Hitler” except Adolf Hitler, Democrats have long avoided “fascist” as possible linguistic overkill. After all, they remember how Hillary Clinton’s dismissal of Trump supporters in 2016 as “a basket of deplorables” became a rallying cry for the MAGA movement.

President Joe Biden, for example, who has long called attention to Trump’s threats to democracy, only went far enough to scorch Trump’s movement in 2022 as “like semi-fascism.”

But in this year’s campaign, Trump has considered no epithet too vile to be off-limits. He has persisted in ratcheting up his own rhetorical overkill, stirring up nativist fear and racial resentment, and making threats to use the military against “the enemy from within.” It’s no wonder many Democrats no longer hesitate to use frank language to describe Trump.

Earlier this month, the previously constrained Clinton chimed in with a media post on X (formerly Twitter) that “Trump’s rhetoric has become blatantly fascist.”

Trump, too, has used the f-word, albeit not very much, perhaps because he doesn’t feel it serves to excite his crowds in the direction he seeks. Indeed, Trump surrogates have tried to portray Democrats’ use of the word “fascist” as some kind of dangerous provocation.

I expect to hear from people who disagree with me. Fine. I, too, dislike the feeling that my view is being ignored.

But the other half of that bargain is to respect the rights of others to be heard, not bludgeoned into silence or submission.

In our democracy, we need leaders who are willing to hold themselves accountable to the people over whom they govern instead of looking only for avenues through which they can dodge accountability.

It is Trump’s unmistakable efforts to dodge accountability, to undermine the rule of law and the Constitution to do so, and his promises to double down on that disposition if he wins reelection, that have inspired a long list of Republicans to refuse to endorse him or, indeed, to endorse Harris. They include his own vice president; U.S. Sen. Mitt Romney, his predecessor as the Republican presidential nominee; former President George W. Bush and former Vice President Dick Cheney; and at least five people who served in Trump’s Cabinet.

At this point, I offer my apologies to any Trump supporter who feels unnecessarily offended by my candor on this touchy topic. Fascism does not always announce itself with drums and trumpets at high volume.

Besides, in my experience, everyone defends free speech as long as it is their own. The greatest value of the First Amendment is in protecting the rights of others and views that are not the most popular.

It would be truly tragic for our system to be undone by the very freedoms it was intended to protect. But it’s always possible.

Already, we see reports that Milley fears being recalled to uniform and court-martialed for retribution if Trump gets reelected. Although Milley does not appear to have broken any laws, a president with the near-imperial powers today’s conservative Supreme Court has granted shouldn’t have much trouble finding something.

Of course, we voters have the power to avert this threat to our democracy. We should use it.

Clarence Page at cpage@chicagotribune.com.