{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/478fd892-5a47-4c5c-882c-4e43072cc7de/69d65628e257f11e037cde75?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"Adrian Wooldridge: How centrists fight back","thumbnail_width":200,"thumbnail_height":200,"thumbnail_url":"https://open-images.acast.com/shows/60ee152d7b57990bc2e77da5/1775654412894-0671a975-9e7e-4ac3-9fe8-60e186b9ee89.jpeg?height=200","description":"<p>Liberalism is under its greatest threat since the 1930s. The question is whether its defenders have the nerve to admit why – and the ideas to fight back.</p><p><br></p><p>Adrian Wooldridge, Bloomberg columnist and author of \"Centrists of the World Unite!\", joins CapX editor Marc Sidwell for an unsentimental diagnosis of liberalism's crisis — and an unexpectedly combative case for its recovery. The liberal tradition that defeated totalitarianism and built the modern world is not, he argues, exhausted. It has been betrayed: hollowed out by a self-satisfied establishment on one side and captured by identitarian collectivism on the other, while the intellectual energy of the age flows freely to the post-liberal right.</p><p><br></p><p>But the book's argument is ultimately one of recovery. Liberalism has reinvented itself before — in the 1890s, a dying Gladstonian creed gave way to a new liberalism that produced Keynes, Beveridge and a generation that rebuilt the post-war world. The genius is latent. The question, as Wooldridge puts it, is whether today's liberals can sound something other than a faltering trumpet.</p>","author_name":"CapX"}