âThe centre of American politics is hollowed out,â according to Kevin M. Schultz, professor and current chair of the department of history at the University of Illinois Chicago.
That wonât be a surprise to anyone, given the re-election of the right-wing populist Donald Trump. But Schultz resists the conclusion that Trumpâs voters have rejected centrist policies across the board.
âMost Americans [still] believe in abortion during the first trimester, the sanctity of and preserving social security,â he told ÌÇĐÄVlog. âThereâs this big popular middle at the centre of the bell curve, but if you look at our political debates, itâs either end of the bell curve which seems to dominate the microphone.â
One of the main explanations is the way that the spectre of the âwhite liberalâ â often typified by the college professor â has proved a highly effective tool to frighten American voters. And this tradition, which Trumpâs ongoing assault on universities both draws on and takes to new heights, is the subject of Schultzâs provocatively titled new book, Why Everyone Hates White Liberals (Including White Liberals): A History, published this week by University of Chicago Press.
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Schultzâs previous books include HIST, a popular college-level textbook of American history, now in its sixth edition; Tri-Faith America: How Catholics and Jews Held Postwar America to its Protestant Promise; and Buckley and Mailer: The Difficult Friendship That Shaped the Sixties. The last of these explores the close but fractious relationship between the left-wing novelist Norman Mailer and the conservative political commentator â whom Schultz now describes as âa patron saint of the modern rightâ.

Buckley is also a crucial figure in Why Everyone Hates White Liberals, which explores âone of the most important and understudied scapegoats in American historyâ. Ever since Buckley â who founded the conservative National Review in 1955 â and particularly since the 1980s, Schultz demonstrates, âwhite liberalsâ have been demonised from all sides for a wide variety of alleged failings.
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From the Left, they have been dismissed as patronising, out-of-touch elitists â âlimousine liberalsâ. From the right, they have been blamed for the excesses of the 1960s. They are seen as, alternatively, insufficiently radical or as too radical; as secret white supremacists or as over-concerned with the rights of minorities. Some of these contradictory stereotypes have proved crucial in uniting â in opposition to liberals â the populist, libertarian and traditionalist branches of conservatism, which would otherwise be at loggerheads.
Universities have long been a central target of anti-liberal rhetoric. All the way back to the 1950s, Schultz said, âa lot of the us-versus-them critique of liberals has centred on cultural powerâ. Polemicists turned their fire on âthe movie icons of Hollywood, who are bringing their values into movie theatres across the countryâ, but also on âthe liberal professors who are indoctrinating your childrenâ. It has proved very politically convenient for conservatives to focus anti-elitist ire âon an amorphous group of people in the cultural and academic realmsâ rather than on corporate and financial elites.
On one level, Donald Trump has just drawn on certain strands of this long-standing anti-liberal playbook to appeal to a broad spectrum of Republican voters.
Campus resource: Faculty must stand together to confront the American illiberal peril
When addressing the religious right, Schultz noted, âhe talks about âthe secular liberal eliteâ, which wants to take away their religious freedoms and their right to practise their faithâ. For middle-class voters â including Blacks and Latinos, who supported him in greater numbers in 2024 than in 2016 â âhe has played into the notion that liberals are harbingers of government regulation and red tape, which will get in the way of your ability to succeedâ. For a different though overlapping constituency, Trump portrays liberals as âthe thought police, proponents of political correctness. They are no fun and they are policing your behaviour, taking away your ability to make a joke at someone elseâs expense.â
Yet Trump has also gone much further than his predecessors in making âanti-liberalismâ one of the cornerstones of his electoral platform, Schultz believes: âHeâs really owned it in his personal style. He has elevated the rhetoricâ used by earlier presidents such as Ronald Reagan, ânot just to point out that the opposition is liberal but to make them the enemyâ.
Hence the T-shirts Schulz saw in stores while on vacation in Florida reading: âI am oiling my gun with liberal tearsâ. His book also quotes a woman called Bev, who lives in âTrump countryâ in Missouri and replied to a query on Quora with the observation that the people she knows âdonât give a shit what [Trump] does. Heâs just something to rally around and hate liberals, thatâs it, period...Itâs fuck liberals, thatâs pretty much it.â
While earlier critiques of the academy were largely aimed at firing up the conservative base rather than shaping policy, Schultz argues that in Trumpâs hands they have âbecome much more than just a rhetorical attackâ.
Back in 1951, Buckley published his first book, The Superstitions of âAcademic Freedomâ, which âargued that professors were teaching children to oppose the two Cs, Christianity and capitalism, indoctrinating the youth in moral relativism and religious tolerance on the one hand and socialism or social democracy on the otherâ. Yet Buckleyâs polemic, Schultz went on, merely issued âa plea to donors to stop giving to Yale if they didnât agree with what teachers were teachingâ.
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And though Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan also attacked liberal professors, âthey did not necessarily cut the NEA [National Endowment for the Arts] or NEH [National Endowment for the Humanities] budgets,â added Schultz. Rather, they âmandated that those moneys be spent in all 50 statesâ, which had a modest effect in âdirecting funds away from liberal strongholds such as New York, San Francisco and Los Angelesâ.
None of this came even close to what Trump is doing, Schultz said, in âremoving some of the support the federal government gives universities for the research they conduct â ironically, including the kind of stuff he embraced during to accelerate the development of a vaccine against Covid. Heâs attacking those institutions [such as the National Institutes of Health] with the blunt force of the federal government.â

It is hardly in dispute that American college professors, on average, lean further to the left than the general population. Yet Schultz has no time for the claim that âprofessors are brainwashing their students into thinking in certain ways. A common complaint I hear in my department is that we canât even get students to read the syllabus, much less convince them that Keynesianism is the best way to run an economy!â
He acknowledges that most of his fellow historians are âeager to point out the flaws in American democracy and eager to point out the wins of the civil rights movement, together with the losses from the violence fomented against itâ. Yet there is also âa fairly strong commitment â not universal and not blind â to the American ideal of the future of democracy, the balance between equality and freedom, the push towards free speech,â he added.
âA lot of teachers believe in the American dream and the promise of America and want to expand rather than curtail them. When they teach the shortcomings of the American dream, it is not to demonise America but to show how the country has fallen short of its ideals. That gets cut out from the critique of what the liberal professorate wants.â
Take the case of which attracted much criticism from the right for making slavery central to the story of the foundation of the US. Schultz admitted that the rival which issued its report two days before the end of Trumpâs first term, was âlargely dismissed by historians as a hack job that decimated their attempts at crafting an authentic past (always an impossible task, but our endeavour nonetheless) in order to promote a partisan agendaâ.
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Yet even historians who were broadly sympathetic âdidnât swallow the entirety of the 1619 Project eitherâ. They âpointed out many shortcomingsâ and âroundly criticised it for offering too narrow an understanding of what the United States was...The presumption of todayâs Right that the Left and those they call âliberalsâ simply want to indoctrinate children into believing everything the 1619 Project pronounces is flatly not true, at least not in higher education.â
So what do recent developments feel like on the ground in universities such as Schultzâs?
âThe attack on professors is not necessarily new,â he responded (speaking before the Trump administrationâs on Harvard University, cutting off its federal funding and threatening to end its charitable status and bar it from recruiting international students). âBut the way Trump is pushing forward his attacks is much more blunt and direct and âcreativeâ â in a destructive kind of way. That has left a lot of academic leaders incredibly nervous about how far his attacks might extend.â
Since Schultzâs university is part of the public University of Illinois system, âwe depend to an extent on federal grant money and especially state dollars. We are very concerned about the loss of federal dollars but also about the way Trump is doing this, announcing something on Friday which will go into effect on Monday, which means your university suddenly loses $47 million over a weekend. A lot of the concern stems from uncertainty rather than manifested action. I have welcomed the courtsâ mandates that some of these radical immediate changes be put on pause while they get studied and examined.â
Schultz would like to see university administrators âdoing a better job of getting the word out about all the good that universities do for our societyâ. This is a case they are skilled at making âin state legislatures all the time when they ask for state appropriationsâ, but they needed to find better ways to âmake the case more broadlyâ.
As for academics, Schultz urges them to recognise the central claim of White Liberals â namely, âthe limitations on using the word âliberalâ as a rallying cry for the Left or the centre-Leftâ.
Presidents from Franklin D. Roosevelt to John F. Kennedy were proud to call themselves âliberalsâ. But once the right succeeded in making the word close to toxic, their successors were much more wary â even when proposing âliberalâ policies that were and are broadly popular with the electorate.
This had led, Schultz reflected, to âa significant problem for the left in marketing its core ideasâ. Kamala Harris, he writes, made the case for âsupporting the commonwealâ by telling the story of her late mother chastising her for âthinking she could do everything on her own and assuming that her actions didnât have knock-on effects. âYou think you just fell out of a coconut tree?â Harris would impersonate her mother as saying.â
But coconut memes proved a poor substitute for a strong and inspiring label to encapsulate Harrisâ political philosophy. The task for academics, then, is to work with left-leaning politicians to find an alternative; Schultzâs book âends by exploring a few of the possibilitiesâ, he noted â while also stressing that it would be counter-productive for academics to actively team up with Democratic politicians to oppose Trump's agenda.

The other thing academics can do is to follow Schultzâs example and keep writing books that engage with what is happening to American politics and society. The first Trump administration, for instance, led to a deluge of often anguished books by academics analysing and critiquing the phenomenon.
But does Schultz believe that academics will still be willing to put their heads above the parapet during this more vengeful second term?
He has noticed a certain amount of anxiety, he conceded: âSome members of my department are extremely wary and will use non-internal email addresses if they want to write something that might be contentious. They are worried about being âoutedâ and attacked.â
Indeed, prominent Yale professors and Trump critics Timothy Snyder, Marci Shore and Jason Stanley have recently announced their with Stanley explaining that his decision was âentirely because of the political climate in the United Statesâ. Just last week, , Gerald F. and Marjorie G. Fitzgerald professor of economic history at Northwestern University, made a , noting âThis no longer feels like the right place to raise a family and pursue a research careerâ.
As of now, none of Schultzâs faculty have expressed a desire to leave the US. âBut I have seen some academics trying to migrate from red [Republican] states to blue [Democrat] states because they feel there will be more protections and opportunities [there] to publish more freely, and they will feel safer from the public,â he said.
For the moment, Schultz remains cautiously optimistic that academics are going to âcontinue to write op-eds and books about political polarisation and how Trump has amplified it to his benefit. There are just not enough personal attacks on academics that would warrant any kind of slowdown in such protest literature,â he believes.
âÀáłÙ could happen: we could see professors being arrested or imprisoned for some of the things they are saying. But I donât foresee that happening. Even Trumpâs supporters would see going against the courts or curtailing the rights of journalists to publish what they want as a breach of trust.â
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