"Liberal Progressivism offers a powerful critique of contemporary identity politics as it has reshaped today’s polarized society, and it does so with a stubborn independence that sets it apart from both the celebrants of ‘inclusivity’ and the jeremiads of its conservative opponents. Anyone interested in the future of the left and the chasm separating so many bourgeois progressives from the working class will find it a riveting read."Ian McKay, Professor of History, McMaster