One of the interesting things about authoritarian regimes is that all ideology sort of drains out of them. Because they don't allow competitive elections and suppress any but the approved candidates it will quickly degenerate into a 'what the powers that be say goes' regime.
So for example Biden will make boilerplate speeches about the dangers of white supremacy and fascism and at the same time tell local politicians to stop releasing BLM and AntiFa rioters because he'll want it to look like he's solved that problem. He'll call for unity and dialog while those same local politicians clamp down on anti-regime demonstrations for violating lockdown and social media will clamp down on anti-regime speech for violating rules on hate speech/doxing/incitement/unspecified.
If Republicans get silenced, fired, or refused service the line will be 'private companies can do what they want' but if Democrats get the same treatment it will be pursued via the courts, cake shop style. If the cases fail, new cases will be arranged with slightly different particulars. Like
the second cake shop case.
However what the regime stands for ideologically never be entirely clear, rather like the CCP stands for 'the socialist market economy' and 'the people's democratic dictatorship'. Of course, people less autistic than me will read between the lines and realize what the regime stands for is itself in power and no viable opposition and sense where its red lines are, though those will move with time.
Any Internet stream this time?