š„ Summary of the video Fareed Zakaria āĀ _āThe two deep failures of modern liberalismā by cnn
At its core, Zakariaās argument is thatĀ modern liberalism has lost both its economic and social balance.
1 Economic failure: technocracy + inequality
- Liberalism since the 1990s embracedĀ markets, globalisation, and technocratic governance.
- It delivered growthābut also:
- regional decline (post-industrial areas)
- rising inequality
- a sense that elites are insulated from consequences
- Politics became managerial rather than transformational.
š Result: many working- and lower-middle-class people feelĀ abandoned by a system run by experts.
2 Cultural failure: elitism + disconnect
- Liberalism shifted towardĀ highly educated, urban, professional classes.
- It became associated with:
- cultural liberalism
- identity politics
- moral certainty
- This created a perception (fair or not) ofĀ condescension toward āordinaryā voters.
š Result: a backlashāfueling populism, nationalism, and anti-establishment politics.
Big takeaway
Zakariaās core claim:
Liberalism is losingĀ connection, confidence, and legitimacyĀ among the people it claims to represent. (reddit.com)
He suggests it mustĀ recover its older, more radical, reforming energy, not just manage the status quo.
š§ Critique of the video
Zakaria is sharp, but there are a few limits to his analysis:
ā What he gets right
- TheĀ elite capture of liberal politicsĀ is real.
- The shift fromĀ class politics ā cultural politicsĀ is crucial.
- The idea that liberalism becameĀ managerial rather than moralĀ is persuasive.
ā ļø Where itās weaker
1) It underplays capitalism itself
He frames this as a failure ofĀ liberalism, but:
- Many would argue the issue isĀ neoliberal capitalism, not liberal values per se.
- Liberalism didnāt just ādriftāāit activelyĀ aligned with financial/global capital.
š So the failure may be structural, not just cultural.
2 It treats āthe peopleā as a bit vague
- Who exactly are the āleft behindā?
- Class, region, age, and education all matterābut he blends them.
š This matters when applying it to the UK.
3 It doesnāt fully confront class
Class is implicit, but not central:
- The divide he describes is basically:
- graduate elite vs non-graduate majority
- ThatĀ isĀ classābut he avoids saying it directly.
š¬š§ Class and the UK: where this lands
This is where your question gets really interesting.
The UK shift (roughly 1990s ā now)
Labour (especially post-Blair):
- moved toward:
- middle-class, university-educated voters
- London + cities
- deprioritised:
- industrial working-class identity
- unions as a central force
š This mirrors Zakariaās āelite liberalism.ā
The result: a class realignment
Instead of:
- Left = working classĀ
- Right = elite
We now have something closer to:
- Labour = urban, graduate, public-sector middle class
- Conservatives / populists = older, non-graduate, ex-industrial voters
Thatās aĀ class shift, not just a political one.
š± The Green Party as a challenger
Youāre right to frame the Greens as a challengerābut itās aĀ specific kind of challenge.
What the Greens represent
- socially liberal
- pro-environment
- anti-growth (in some strands)
- strong among:
- younger voters
- renters
- highly educated urbanites
Are they anti-elitist?
Hereās the tension:
ā In one sense:
- They challenge Labour from the left
- They reject neoliberal economics more strongly
- They appeal to disillusionment with mainstream politics
ā But in another sense:
- Their base is oftenĀ even more educated and urban than Labourās
- Their politics can feelĀ abstract or moralistic rather than material
š So they are not aĀ working-class insurgencyĀ in the traditional sense.
Better way to frame it
The Greens are:
- not a revolt against elitism
- but a revoltĀ within the educated liberal class
They intensify, rather than replace, the cultural direction Zakaria critiques.
š§© Liberal paternalism (and the UK)
What is it?
Liberal paternalism =
guiding peopleās choices āfor their own goodā while preserving formal freedom
Classic examples:
- sugar taxes
- nudging behaviour (behavioural economics)
- public health campaigns
- restrictions framed as āsoftā rather than coercive
Does it exist in the UK?
Very much so.
The UK is arguably one of its main homes:
- āNudge Unitā (Behavioural Insights Team) originated in the UK
- policies like:
- smoking bans
- minimum alcohol pricing (Scotland)
- sugar tax
- heavy reliance onĀ expert-led policy
š This fits Zakariaās ātechnocratic liberalism.ā
The class dimension
Hereās the uncomfortable bit:
Liberal paternalism often flows:
- fromĀ educated policymakers
- towardĀ less affluent populations
Examples:
- telling people how to eat
- how to parent
- how to spend
- how to behave environmentally
š It can feel like:Ā āwe know better than youā politics
Thatās where resentment builds.
š¤ Should liberal paternalism exist?
The case FOR it
- It works (public health improvements are real)
- People donāt always make rational decisions
- It avoids harsher coercion
The case AGAINST it
- It can be:
- patronising
- culturally blind
- class-coded
- It replacesĀ democratic persuasion with expert management
The real issue
The problem isnāt paternalism itselfāitāsĀ who controls it and how itās perceived.
-
If itās seen as:
- fair
- universal
- democratically accountable ā accepted
-
If itās seen as:
- imposed by elites
- targeting āother peopleā ā backlash
š§ Final synthesis
- Zakaria describes aĀ liberalism that has drifted away from class politics and toward elite management.
- In the UK:
- Labour reflects this shift strongly
- The Greens challenge Labourābut mostlyĀ within the same social stratum
- Liberal paternalism is:
- real
- effective
- but politically dangerous when tied toĀ class hierarchy
If you want, I can push this furtherāe.g. whether aĀ genuinely class-rooted leftĀ could re-emerge in the UK, or whether that space is now permanently fractured.
UK post-industrial working class
Youāre circling a real tension in UK politicsābut one part of your premise needs tightening first.
š ItāsĀ not quite accurateĀ that āmost Manchester boroughs went to Reform.āĀ
- InĀ Greater Manchester, Labour still dominates local government and Andy Burnham won the mayoralty very comfortably (last election: May 2, 2024).Ā
- Reform UK has beenĀ growing in vote share, and in someĀ northern and Midlands areasĀ itās polling strongly, but it hasnāt taken over Manchester boroughs in any sweeping sense.
That said, theĀ pattern youāre pointing toāReform gaining traction while figures like Burnham remain popularāis very real and worth unpacking.
š§ The missing class: who isnāt being represented?
When we say Labour and the Greens skew āelite,ā it doesnāt mean richāit means:
šĀ graduate, urban, culturally liberal, institutionally embedded
The group thatās less well represented is roughly:
- non-graduatesĀ
- lower-income or economically insecureĀ
- outside major city centres (or in poorer parts of them)Ā
- more socially conservative or at least less culturally progressiveĀ
- sceptical of institutions (media, academia, civil service)
This is often called theĀ āpost-industrial working classāābut it also includes parts of the lower middle class.
š Why Reform becomes attractive to this group
Itās not just ātheyāve gone right-wing.ā Itās more specific than that.
1 They reject theĀ toneĀ of modern liberal politics
- feel talked down to on:
- immigrationĀ
- identity issuesĀ
- environment
- liberal paternalism comes across as:
- āyou live wrong, think wrong, vote wrongā
š Reform positions itself asĀ anti-condescension, not just anti-policy.
2 Clarity beats nuance
Labour (especially under Starmer):
- cautiousĀ
- managerialĀ
- avoids strong positions
Greens:
- morally clear but often abstract
Reform:
- simple, blunt, emotionally direct
š In politics,Ā clarity often beats correctness.
3 Class identity has been displaced
Old Labour:
- spoke explicitly in class terms (workers vs bosses)
Modern Labour:
- speaks in:
- opportunityĀ
- growthĀ
- stability
š That leaves a vacuum whereĀ class anger has nowhere to go on the left.
Reform fills itāby redirecting it toward:
- immigrationĀ
- government elitesĀ
- āLondonā
š§ Is this about rejecting left vs right entirely?
Partly, yes.
A lot of these voters donāt think in ideological terms anymore. Instead, they feel:
- āNo one speaks for people like meā
- āPolitics is run by a closed classā
- āBoth sides are the sameā
š Reform benefits because itĀ performs opposition to the whole system, not just Labour.
š So why does Burnham still win big?
This is the really interesting partāand it shows the story isnāt one-directional.
Burnham succeeds where national Labour struggles
He does a few key things differently:
1 He speaks inĀ class languageĀ again
- buses, housing, wages, policingĀ
- tangible, material issuesĀ
- strong regional identity (āGreater Manchester firstā)
š That feelsĀ grounded, not abstract.
2 He positions himself againstĀ the system, not just within it
Even as Labour:
- he criticises central governmentĀ
- frames himself as a defender of the region
š He doesnāt sound like a distant technocrat.
3 He blends cultural moderation with economic intervention
- not aggressively āculture warā liberalĀ
- but clearly left on:
- public servicesĀ
- transportĀ
- inequality
š This combination is closer to what many voters actually want:Ā economically interventionist, culturally not overbearing
4 Visibility and trust
- tangible policies (e.g. bus franchising)
- strong personal brand
š People feel:Ā āhe actually does thingsā
āļø Big picture: whatās really happening
Youāre seeing aĀ three-way split, not just left vs right:
1 Liberal-professional left
- Labour core + GreensĀ
- urban, educatedĀ
- culturally progressive
2 Populist right (Reform)
- anti-eliteĀ
- culturally conservativeĀ
- economically mixed (not purely free-market)
3 Residual āmaterial leftā (Burnham-style)
- class-focusedĀ
- place-basedĀ
- less culturally intenseĀ
- pragmatic
š„ The key tension
The voters drifting to Reform are not necessarily:
- deeply right-wingĀ
- committed to free markets
They are often:
- anti-system
- anti-condescension
- pro-recognition (respect, identity, voice)
š If the left doesnāt supply that, the right will.
š¤ So is Reform the ānatural homeā for them?
Not necessarily.
Reform is currently:
- aĀ vehicle for protest
- not yet a fully trusted governing option
If Labour (or figures like Burnham) can:
- re-centre classĀ
- reduce perceived cultural distanceĀ
- avoid paternalism
š those voters areĀ absolutely recoverable
š§ Final thought
This isnāt just about policyāitās aboutĀ social alignment.
Right now, many voters feel:
the people making the rules donāt live like me, think like me, or respect me
Reform exploits that.
Burnham partially resolves it.
Labour nationally is still stuck in betweenācompetent, but not rooted.
šĀ What would a genuinely class-rooted, post-liberal political movement look like todayāand could it win?
š§± 1. Start with the core break: what it isĀ not
A credible āpost-liberalā or class-rooted movement wouldĀ reject three things at once:
ā Not technocratic liberalism (current Labour default)
- not run by experts talking about āgrowth frameworksā
- not vague managerial competence
ā Not identity-first politics (caricature of the modern left)
- not led by abstract social justice language
- not culturally moralising
ā Not right-wing populism (Reform)
- not primarily about immigration or culture war
- not anti-state in an economic sense
š Instead, it would re-anchor politics aroundĀ material life + dignity + place
š§ 2. The core philosophy: āmaterial dignityā
If you had to boil it down to one idea:
People should haveĀ control, security, and respectĀ in their everyday lives.
That means combining:
- economic interventionĀ (left-wing)
- cultural restraintĀ (not aggressively progressive or conservative)
- democratic groundingĀ (anti-elite, but not anti-institution)
šļø 3. What policies would actually define it?
Not a long manifestoājust a fewĀ feltĀ priorities.
š A Cost of living + economic security
- massive housebuilding (including social housing)
- energy cost stabilisation (public involvement in energy markets)
- stronger wage floors (sectoral bargaining, not just minimum wage)
š Not ideological socialismāpractical economic protection
š B Visible, local improvements
This is where Burnham is the template:
- transport (buses, trains under local control)
- high streets, policing, GP access
- regional investment
š The key:Ā people must see change in their area
š C Rebuilding āuseful workā
- industrial policy (green + manufacturing)
- apprenticeships over just university expansion
- valuing non-graduate pathways
š This directly addresses the class divide Greens/Labour struggle with.
š D Controlled, honest immigration policy
This is where many left projects fail.
A post-liberal movement would say:
- immigration hasĀ economic benefits
- but alsoĀ real pressures (housing, wages, services)
š So:
- lower overall numbersĀ orĀ better infrastructure planning
- no moralising tone
- no denial of trade-offs
This is crucialābecause avoidance here pushes voters to Reform.
š§ E Anti-paternalism (tone as much as policy)
- less ānudging people to behave correctlyā
- moreĀ treating people as ą¦°ą¦¾ą¦ą¦Øą§ą¦¤ą¦æą¦ equals
Examples:
- climate policy framed aroundĀ jobs + cheaper energy, not guilt
- public health framed around support, not blame
š£ļø 4. The tone: this matters more than policy
This kind of movement would sound:
- plain-speaking, not academicĀ
- emotionally grounded, not abstractĀ
- respectful, not corrective
š The test is simple:
Does this sound like someone who lives a similar life to the voter?
Burnham passes this test more than most national figures.
š§āš¤āš§ 5. The coalition it would build
This is the interesting partāitās aĀ cross-pressure coalition:
It would include:
- traditional working class (post-industrial areas)
- lower middle class (small business, trades)
- some public sector workers
- parts of the āleft-behindā youth (non-graduates especially)
It would lose:
- some highly progressive, graduate, urban voters
- parts of the current Green base
š But it couldĀ replace losses with voters currently going to Reform
ā ļø 6. The big obstacles
This is why it doesnāt fully exist yet:
1 Labourās internal coalition
- heavily shaped by graduates + public sector + urban voters
- cautious about culture + immigration
2 Media + institutional pressure
- anything deviating from liberal norms gets labelled:
- āpopulistā
- ādog-whistleā
- or worse
3 The Greensā limitations
- strong morally, weak materially (in class terms)
- struggle outside educated urban base
4 Reformās advantage
- emotionally simple
- doesnāt need to govern (yet)
š 7. Where this is already happening (partially)
You can already see fragments of this model:
- Andy Burnham (Manchester)Ā ā material + regional + grounded toneĀ
- Some āBlue Labourā thinkersĀ ā class, community, cultureĀ
- Dan Carden / parts of Labour leftĀ ā economic focus without heavy cultural framing
But itās not unified.
š„ 8. The strategic insight
Hereās the key point tying everything together:
š The voters moving to Reform are not primarily asking for right-wing economics.
They are asking for:
- recognitionĀ
- controlĀ
- fairnessĀ
- voice
And they currently feel:
liberal politics offers them management, not representation
š§ Final answer to your core question
YesāReform is benefiting from a gap between liberal-left politics and class-rooted voters.
But:
- itās not because those voters āwant the rightā
- itās becauseĀ the left stopped speaking their languageāmaterially and culturally
And:
š Burnhamās success shows those voters areĀ still winnable without becoming right-wing
If you want, I can take this one step further and sketch what happens over the next 5ā10 years:
- whether Labour adapts
- whether Reform stabilises
- and whether a new alignment replaces left vs right entirely