Who are the real liberals today? – The Week
This is a revolutionary moment in American culture.
On one side, activists and employees are demanding fundamental change to overturn structural racism deeply embedded within institutions of journalism, education, and business. On the other, critics accuse the would-be revolutionaries of engaging in acts of illiberalism, including the silencing and firing of people who resist the proposed changes or even show insufficient zeal in enacting them.
So far, the fight between the two sides has generated far more heat than light. That's what makes Osita Nwanevu's essay in The New Republic, "The Willful Blindness of Reactionary Liberalism," such a welcome intervention.
In defending the activist side of the dispute, Nwanevu's tone is high-minded, his reasoning clear and thoughtful. While critics of the activists frequently call the latter a "mob" or describe it in explicitly religious terms, Nwanevu makes a careful, deliberate, complex argument designed to show that it's actually the critics who are acting and speaking impulsively, reacting to events without deep thinking, intentionally refusing to see the reality going on around them.
As one of those critics (unnamed in Nwanevu's essay), I disagree. But it's important to clarify exactly why to ensure that both sides keep the conversation going instead of merely talking past each other, with each side doing little more than bucking up allies and seeking to discredit opponents. In my view, Nwanevu is quite wrong to describe social justice activists as "expanding" the bounds of liberalism, since the aim of their reforms is a deliberate constriction of debate. It would therefore be more honest for him and his ideological allies to admit this and accept its illiberal implications.
I've been pointing to the illiberalism of the social-justice left since at least 2013. I backed off somewhat during the first couple years of the Trump administration, since it seemed a little peevish and an offense against proportionality to write frequently about the topic with the White House occupied by a man who regularly expresses contempt for civil liberties. But there have been events worth addressing over the past year or so. Roughly since the publication of the "1619 Project" in The New York Times last August, but especially since the newsroom rebellions began early last month, I've found myself led once again to call out the illiberalism of the activist left.
Yet as far as Nwanevu is concerned, those who hold my views are the ones guilty of illiberalism.
Part of the problem may be that Nwanevu is responding to weaker arguments made by some on my own side. He's right to note, for example, that the core issue has nothing much to do with "free speech" in constitutional terms, since no one is raising a threat of government censorship. But neither does it concern, as Nwanevu asserts, "freedom of association," including the freedom of a community civil society, a newspaper, a corporate workplace to establish its own standards, since no one is denying the legitimacy of that freedom.
As I've argued on other occasions, every community makes decisions about what ideas and attitudes to rule out of bounds to treat some ideas as worthy of debate and others as unacceptable and warranting cancellation. What's distinctive about the present moment is that groups of activists are demanding to be given the power to make this all-important decision within certain institutions and they are using this newfound power to shift (and often constrict) the lines of acceptable thought and discussion, ruling certain arguments (and the people who make them) out of bounds.
Why do I oppose this effort? It has nothing to do with public policy. I'm all for vigorous debate and personally support efforts to ensure that Black Americans and other minority groups receive equal treatment under the law and that police reforms address and rectify manifest injustices in law enforcement. But that's only a small (and peripheral) part of what Nwanevu discusses in his essay and what his activist allies are aiming for. What he and they are really concerned with is defending the view that American society is comprised of "intelligible, if often hidden, systems" of racial oppression, and rejecting the views of "reactionary liberal[s]" like myself, who see the country as "a jumble of bits and pieces a muddle that defies both systemic understanding and collective action."
That really is the nub of the issue, though I think this is a tendentious way to describe the difference between the two camps. My criticism of the "1619 Project," for example, was focused less on the details of the various contributions and more on the framing of the project as an effort to tell the definitive, "true" story of America, with the history of slavery and its legacy sitting at its very core, decisively shaping everything else.
This was an activist move an act of deliberate exaggeration, a flattening out of the complexity that Nwanevu dismisses as a "muddle" and a "jumble," a decision to focus monomaniacally on one (important) facet of the multifaceted American experience and warp everything else around it. It certainly wasn't an example of seeking to achieve what Nwanevu calls "parity" among various groups. It was an effort to make Black history the defining feature of the country.
The best one can say for the effort is that it's an act of intentional overcorrection: American history has for too long been told as a story focused on white people, so now we should tell it as a story focused on Black people. But that's not a way to achieve a more accurate understanding of the past. It's an act of replacing one form of distortion with another.
And this brings us back to the second-order issue to the question of whether the activists fighting for control of decisions in the workplace believe this kind of criticism is acceptable, and hence worth publishing, at all. From his essay, it's genuinely hard to tell where Nwanevu comes down on the question. During an especially perplexing passage, he mocks New York Times columnist David Brooks for "surreal condescension" in wondering, in the midst of an essay about Ta-Nehisi Coates's much-lauded memoir Between the World and Me, whether, as a white person, he had "standing to respond" critically to Coates' "experience."
When Brooks' column appeared, five years ago, it was possible to wave away such concerns. Today, after a series of forced resignations and firings at a series of media organizations, they cannot be. Yet Nwanevu dismisses them anyway before quickly pivoting to expressions of admiration for two more recent columns from Brooks in which the columnist shows that his reading in Black history has "worked" on him, leading to a "conversion" to support for reparations for slavery and an acknowledgement that "moderates" have "failed Black America."
Brooks has learned. He won't be canceled.
But what if his reading hadn't "worked"? What if Brooks stood by or deepened his respectful criticisms of Coates? What if he continued to argue, as he did in that five-year-old column, that "this country, like each person in it, is a mixture of glory and shame" and that although "violence is embedded in America it is not close to the totality of America"? What if instead of joining Coates in calling for reparations, he argued, as I have, that it's a proposal doomed to failure? Would he be allowed to make those arguments in The New York Times today? Or would he be risking his job in doing so not because he would be severely criticized, which is assumed and expected, but because he would provoke a rebellion on staff and calls for his dismissal for refusing to adequately listen, learn, and adjust his views?
I want a public world in which Ta-Nehisi Coates is free to make his arguments with as much potency as he possibly can. But I also want a public world in which his critics can do the same without fear of crossing lines newly drawn. One argument. Then the next. And so on, down through the years. That's how we truly learn and grow as a culture not by taking control of the boundaries of debate, narrowing them to verify our tidy certainties, protecting our sacred texts, and punishing those who dare to profane them.
I don't know if Osita Nwanevu shares this vision of a free, liberal society. I do know that many of the people on his side of the debate appear not to. And that he nonetheless believes that those who think the way I do are the ones guilty of illiberalism. Maybe one day, if the argument continues, I'll be able to persuade him otherwise.
More:
Who are the real liberals today? - The Week
- Carneys Liberals Take Another Step Toward a Majority Government - Bloomberg - February 20th, 2026 [February 20th, 2026]
- Another Canadian Conservative lawmaker defects to Carneys governing Liberals - AP News - February 20th, 2026 [February 20th, 2026]
- Opinion | Liberals exploited public housing. That must stop. - The Washington Post - February 20th, 2026 [February 20th, 2026]
- Liberals extend Inuit Child First Initiative for 1 year, again - Nunatsiaq News - February 20th, 2026 [February 20th, 2026]
- Conservative MP Matt Jeneroux crosses floor to Liberals - The Globe and Mail - February 20th, 2026 [February 20th, 2026]
- Liberals add third Conservative floor-crosser, setting up potentially decisive byelections - iPolitics - February 20th, 2026 [February 20th, 2026]
- Edmonton Riverbend community reacts to MP joining Liberals - MSN - February 20th, 2026 [February 20th, 2026]
- A 3rd floor-crosser puts Liberals on brink of majority. Are more coming? - CBC - February 20th, 2026 [February 20th, 2026]
- How Ontario Liberals hope to exit political wilderness when they elect new leader in November - CBC - February 20th, 2026 [February 20th, 2026]
- Video: Carney meets with Jeneroux after Alberta MP leaves Conservatives to join Liberals - The Globe and Mail - February 20th, 2026 [February 20th, 2026]
- Conservative MP Matt Jeneroux crosses the floor to the Liberals - National Post - February 20th, 2026 [February 20th, 2026]
- EXCLUSIVE POLL: Carney Liberals on the heels of Conservatives in Alberta - Western Standard - February 20th, 2026 [February 20th, 2026]
- Whats Behind the Centrists Resistance to the Resistance Liberals? - The New Republic - February 18th, 2026 [February 18th, 2026]
- Liberals clash over AOC's word salad on Taiwan, arguing 'that answer was terrible and you know it - Yahoo - February 18th, 2026 [February 18th, 2026]
- Sussan Ley is todays scapegoat - but she was never the Liberals core problem | Tony Barry - The Guardian - February 18th, 2026 [February 18th, 2026]
- What the Albanese government did on the environment amid the Liberals turmoil: threatened species, a new coal project and carbon leakage - The... - February 18th, 2026 [February 18th, 2026]
- Afternoon Update: Liberals leaked immigration plan; Bondi accused appears in court; and how to grieve a pet - The Guardian - February 18th, 2026 [February 18th, 2026]
- New opposition leader Taylor wants to stop bad immigration but says Liberals arent One Nation lite - The Guardian - February 18th, 2026 [February 18th, 2026]
- The right wing has seized control of the Liberals, but the fight has just begun - Australian Broadcasting Corporation - February 18th, 2026 [February 18th, 2026]
- Entangled in words: the Vende genocide, liberals, and patriots - Contando Estrelas - February 18th, 2026 [February 18th, 2026]
- LILLEY: Liberals dead-set on attacking Jamil Jivani over effort to help with Trump - Toronto Sun - February 18th, 2026 [February 18th, 2026]
- Plotters, kingmakers and dark horses the Liberals vying for control - Australian Broadcasting Corporation - February 18th, 2026 [February 18th, 2026]
- Nanny vouchers and tax offsets floated by Liberals - AFR - February 18th, 2026 [February 18th, 2026]
- Liberals see path forward for budget bill, but Conservatives still have huge concerns with cabinet's 'regulatory sandbox' - The Hill Times - February 18th, 2026 [February 18th, 2026]
- Mainstream liberals join Soros in bankrolling group backing DC jury nullification effort - Washington Examiner - February 18th, 2026 [February 18th, 2026]
- Former President Leads Early-Election Race in Bulgaria as the Liberals Trail in Third Place, Survey Shows - Novinite.com - February 18th, 2026 [February 18th, 2026]
- Gun trainers nationwide say women and liberals are taking more interest in classes after Alex Prettis shooting - NBC News - February 11th, 2026 [February 11th, 2026]
- Gun trainers nationwide say women and liberals are taking more interest in classes after Alex Prettis shooting - NBC News - February 11th, 2026 [February 11th, 2026]
- View from The Hill: Liberals desperate for a path out of purgatory - The Conversation - February 11th, 2026 [February 11th, 2026]
- View from The Hill: Liberals desperate for a path out of purgatory - The Conversation - February 11th, 2026 [February 11th, 2026]
- Local Liberals: The Second Amendment Is for Everyone - East Lansing Info - February 11th, 2026 [February 11th, 2026]
- Matthew Lau: The Liberals weak case for a spring election - Yahoo! Finance Canada - February 11th, 2026 [February 11th, 2026]
- Several Liberals considering their options as race for leadership heats up - Australian Broadcasting Corporation - February 11th, 2026 [February 11th, 2026]
- Liberals and Conservatives trade accusations of obstruction - CBC - February 11th, 2026 [February 11th, 2026]
- If the Liberals think Angus Taylor will save them, theyre in for a shock - SMH.com.au - February 11th, 2026 [February 11th, 2026]
- Ontario Liberals opt to allow temporary residents to vote in leadership race even though federal counterpart barred them - iPolitics - February 11th, 2026 [February 11th, 2026]
- Liberals, Conservatives in behind-the-scenes talks to avoid spring election: sources - CBC - February 11th, 2026 [February 11th, 2026]
- Ontario Liberals opt to allow temporary residents to vote in leadership race even though federal counterpart barred them - QP Briefing - February 11th, 2026 [February 11th, 2026]
- Coalition support plunges, Liberals face mass resignations. Here's what multicultural voters are saying - SBS Australia - February 11th, 2026 [February 11th, 2026]
- Expect polls to determine when Liberals force early election - Brooks Bulletin - February 11th, 2026 [February 11th, 2026]
- Liberals reject Poilievres call for tax relief on GM workers severance pay - CTV News - February 11th, 2026 [February 11th, 2026]
- Liberals, Conservatives working on deals that could avoid election: sources - CBC - February 11th, 2026 [February 11th, 2026]
- Beware of anti-woke liberals: they attacked the left and helped Trump win | Jan-Werner Mller - The Guardian - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- Political theatre or genuine offer to help? Conservatives show signs of wanting to cooperate with Liberals - Global News - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- Stephen Harper calls for Liberals, Conservatives to come together in the face of Trump, separatist threats - CBC - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- Nationals leader David Littleproud and Liberals leader Sussan Ley have failed to reunite the Coalition in time for the return of parliament. -... - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- Liberals and Nationals to sit apart in parliament after David Littleproud and Sussan Ley fail to make amends - The Guardian - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- How liberals lost the internet | Robert Topinka - The Guardian - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- Who is Doly Begum, the Ontario NDP MPP poached to run for the Liberals in a federal byelection? - Yahoo News Canada - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- Should Liberals Start Arming Themselves? - The Bulwark - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- Liberals revive bill to allow health records to be shared across Canada - CP24 - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- Senior Liberals downplay prospect of leadership spill and urge colleagues get on with the job - The Guardian - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- Stephen Harper calls for Liberals, Conservatives to come together in the face of Trump, separatist threats - Yahoo News Canada - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- Liberals announce Danielle Martin will be their candidate for University-Rosedale byelection - CBC - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- Who is Doly Begum, the Ontario NDP MPP poached to run for the Liberals in a federal byelection? - National Post - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- 'I never wanted to be excluded' from Quebec Liberals, Marwah Rizqy says - Montreal Gazette - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- Conservative MP Jivani heads to Washington after Liberals snub offer to collaborate - Yahoo News UK - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- Election data confirms what we already know: Greens don't like Liberals - Australian Broadcasting Corporation - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- Make no mistake, the Liberals are already history and Labor should be worried - The New Daily - February 4th, 2026 [February 4th, 2026]
- Liberals Should Try Harder to Understand Their Adversaries - The Liberal Patriot - January 28th, 2026 [January 28th, 2026]
- The Carney Liberals find bad habits are hard to break - The Globe and Mail - January 28th, 2026 [January 28th, 2026]
- The Liberals fatal flaw was becoming Nationals-lite. Heres how they can come back from the brink | Tony Barry - The Guardian - January 28th, 2026 [January 28th, 2026]
- Shadow Immigration Minister Paul Scarr claims the Nationals and Liberals have a moral obligation to come together. - Facebook - January 28th, 2026 [January 28th, 2026]
- Liberals tout food inflation relief as think tank flags hidden tax hit on working seniors - play1037.ca - January 28th, 2026 [January 28th, 2026]
- Liberals say more than 22,000 government-banned guns declared in first week of 'buyback' launch - National Post - January 28th, 2026 [January 28th, 2026]
- Greens to thrash out coalition proposal but Liberals can't be trusted, warns member - region.com.au - January 28th, 2026 [January 28th, 2026]
- Liberals agree to hit pause on hate crimes bill and prioritize tougher bail bill - Canada's National Observer - January 28th, 2026 [January 28th, 2026]
- Worst food price inflation in the G7: Pierre Poilievre grills Liberals on rising grocery prices - Global News - January 28th, 2026 [January 28th, 2026]
- Conservatives have 'charted a path' for 'some common ground' with Liberals: Scheer - CBC - January 28th, 2026 [January 28th, 2026]
- Opinion | Liberals have to reckon with the limits of protests - The Boston Globe - January 22nd, 2026 [January 22nd, 2026]
- 90% OF CONSERVATIVES AND 62% OF LIBERALS AGREE: PROVE CITIZENSHIP TO VOTE New polling shows requiring proof of citizenship before voting has massive... - January 22nd, 2026 [January 22nd, 2026]
- Reevaluating the New Liberals, with Henry Tonks - Niskanen Center - January 22nd, 2026 [January 22nd, 2026]
- Ben Mulroney isn't a 'right-wing reactionary,' but he thinks the Liberals 'cynically' used Canadians' fears of Trump last election - Yahoo Lifestyle... - January 22nd, 2026 [January 22nd, 2026]
- The optics are diabolical for Liberals and Nationals, as chaos reigns on a supposed day of mourning - Australian Broadcasting Corporation - January 22nd, 2026 [January 22nd, 2026]
- View from The Hill: defiant Nationals break with Liberals over hate bill, putting strain on Coalition - The Conversation - January 22nd, 2026 [January 22nd, 2026]
- It's over for the Liberals. Soon something better will rise. They did this to themselves. United Australia Party - Facebook - January 22nd, 2026 [January 22nd, 2026]
- Moderates and quota queens have driven me to quit the Liberals - dailytelegraph.com.au - January 22nd, 2026 [January 22nd, 2026]
- No new nursing home plans have been approved since Liberals formed government - CBC - January 22nd, 2026 [January 22nd, 2026]
- Lahren: White Liberals Just Automatically Assume They Speak For Everybody - FOX News Radio - January 22nd, 2026 [January 22nd, 2026]
- Coalition split as it happened: Littleproud says Nationals cannot be part of a shadow ministry under Sussan Ley before announcing split with Liberals... - January 22nd, 2026 [January 22nd, 2026]