The Left is Clearly a Greater Threat to Free Speech than the Right
On Thursday, I took part in a debate at the Cambridge Union. The Motion was: “This House believes the Right is today’s greatest threat to free expression.” Below is the speech against the motion I intended to give – and, for the most part, did give, although I was slightly derailed by having to deal with about half-a-dozen interventions from the floor, as well as respond to the points made by previous speakers. Also on my side were Professor Douglas Headley and Professor Eric Heinze. On the other side were two student speakers and Dr Steven Thrasher, an American academic and journalist. I thought our side had the better arguments, but – predictably – we were defeated by 95 votes to 65.
The motion before us tonight is that the Right-wing is today’s greatest threat to free expression. I want to begin with an obvious but rather important question: what geographical area are we actually talking about?
If the answer is the entire world, and the proposition wishes to cite present-day America as its trump card, as it were — evidence, apparently, that the Right poses a greater menace to free speech than the Left — then I see your America, and I raise you China, North Korea and Cuba.
But if we confine ourselves to Britain, the evidence that the Left poses a greater threat to free speech than the Right is pretty overwhelming.
Let’s start with some data. A YouGov/Policy Exchange poll in 2020 found that Right-leaning academics are significantly more likely to self-censor than their Left-leaning colleagues. Think about what that means. In the institutions supposedly dedicated to the pursuit of truth, scholars with conservative views are afraid to say what they think.
And it’s not just universities.
A 2025 survey for Freedom in the Arts found that 84% of respondents said they “never, rarely, or only sometimes” feel free to publicly voice their opinions — and 78% agreed that people working in the arts wouldn’t dare own up to right-of-centre political views. The taboo topics are well known: gender identity, race, immigration, DEI, the Israel-Palestine conflict. These are not subjects on which the Right has imposed silence. These are subjects on which the Left has made honest disagreement professionally suicidal.
A More in Common survey in 2023 found that people with socially conservative views are far more likely to self-censor than those with socially liberal views. Among those who believe immigration has been bad for the country — a view held by a significant minority of the British public — 33% report self-censoring, compared to just 10% of those who take the opposite view. An earlier poll found that 76% of Britons believe there is “pressure to speak a certain way” about immigration. That pressure is not coming from the Right.
What about Cambridge? I’ll give four examples of Cambridge academics being cancelled for expressing right-of-centre views, and mention one attempt to cancel a student group which has, happily, so far failed.
And I issue this challenge to the other side: produce one example — just one — of an academic at Cambridge being cancelled for expressing left-of-centre views.
My first example is Dr Noah Carl.
In 2019, an open letter signed by more than 1,400 academics and students demanded that St Edmund’s College sack Dr Carl, a young research scholar, for wrongthink. He was accused of being “ethically suspect” and of producing “racist pseudoscience”. His sin was to have published a paper showing a correlation between public hostility towards different immigrant groups and those groups’ propensity to commit violent crimes. It was a piece of empirical research and it showed that those groups the public is most suspicious of – Turks, Romanians, Nigerians – are among the most likely to commit violent crimes, whereas those they’re most well-disposed to – Canadians, Australians – are among the least likely. The critics didn’t take issue with Carl’s methodology. It was his findings they objected to. Even if this was true, it shouldn’t be said out loud.
St Edmund’s held two inquiries. The first, conducted by a senior judge, completely exonerated Dr Carl. The second, an internal investigation, declared his position “untenable” and forced him out.
My second example is Dr Jordan Peterson.
In 2018, he was offered a Visiting Fellowship by the Cambridge Faculty of Divinity. Three months later, the invitation was rescinded. Peterson’s offence? He had been photographed at a public event with his arm around a man wearing a t-shirt saying: “I’m a proud Islamophobe.” The Vice-Chancellor welcomed the cancellation because Cambridge is “an inclusive environment” and inviting him in the first place was “antithetical to Cambridge’s value”. The students’ union agreed, noting that Peterson’s views were “not representative of the student body”.
God forbid students should have to encounter views they don’t agree with. At a university! Whatever next?
Had the same standard been applied to earlier generations of Cambridge scholars, what would have become of Charles Darwin? Would he have been hounded out for questioning the account of the origins of man in the Book of Genesis? What about John Maynard Keynes? No-platformed for casting doubt on neo-classical economics? As for Watson and Crick, no doubt an ‘open letter’ would have been circulated denouncing them as “eugenicists”.
My third example is Dr David Starkey.
In 2020, at the height of the BLM imbroglio, he gave an interview with Darren Grimes in which he said: “Slavery was not genocide, otherwise there wouldn’t be so many damn blacks in Africa or Britain, would there? An awful lot of them survived.”
He later apologised, but by then the die was cast. He lost nine positions, including his Honorary Fellowship at Fitzwilliam College, his publishing deal, and a string of academic honours.
Contrast his fate with that of Dr Priya Gopal, who around the same time tweeted: “White lives don’t matter… as white lives.” Did she receive similar treatment? On the contrary, Cambridge issued the following statement: “The university defends the right of its academics to express their own lawful opinions which others might find controversial.” A few months later, she was promoted to a full professorship.
My fourth example is Dr Nathan Cofnas, another early research scholar, cancelled for a blog post in which he too supposedly engaged in “racist pseudoscience”. More than 1,200 people signed a petition demanding his dismissal. The university Vice-Chancellor and the Master of Emma initially defended his right to freedom of expression, only for the Master to change his mind and ask a committee to investigate him. This kangaroo court concluded that his blog post “could reasonably be construed as amounting to a rejection of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion policies”. Heresy, in other words. Even though the Faculty of Philosophy exonerated Cofnas, concluding the post was an acceptable expression of academic freedom, he was dismissed as a College Research Associate by Emma.
I think the evidence is pretty conclusive that in Cambridge, as in Britain as a whole, the Left poses a greater threat to free expression than the Right.
But I want to end on a more hopeful note. The Cambridge University Women’s Society (CUWS) was recently set up by three gender-critical feminist students. Gender-critical views are, as everyone in this room will know, routinely labelled “Right-wing” — a rhetorical manoeuvre designed to make them easier to suppress. When CUWS was established, it was immediately condemned by the Labour Club, the Left Society, and every LGBT group on campus. A petition was launched demanding the university ban it. The founders were smeared as violent, bigoted fascists. At the society’s inaugural meeting, the windows had to be covered lest the protestors outside identify the heretics within.
But here is the good news. Both the students’ union and the university have now registered the society — the SU noting, somewhat grudgingly, that it was legally obliged to do so despite the fact that CUWS “contradicts” its ethos.
I’m happy to say that the CUWS is part-funded by the Mactaggart Programme, a fund set up by the Free Speech Union, funded by the Ian Mactaggart Foundation, which gives grants to students and student societies promoting free speech – and if any students here would like to apply for a grant for their society, they can do so at grantapplications@freespeechunion.org.
The evidence from Cambridge, and from Britain as a whole, points in one direction. It is the Left — not the Right — that poses the greater threat to free expression today. Don‘t be gaslit by this motion. Stick to the facts and vote no.
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What is the point of the Cambridge Union?
What is the point of Cambridge university, and Oxford for that matter, and any other institution of learning or indeed any institution where the importance of political correctness, wokeness outweighs freedom of speech. And where white people are discriminated against for the hate crime of being born white, in their own country.
University used to be a place, where you would meet people you don’t agree with. And you learned to life with people like that. Now it’s just a massive propaganda factory.
Except that I think you may find there is still a lot of good learning being done at these places, and indeed quite a lot of relatively normal, good people quiertly being educated and doing things which Oxbridge has done for centuries – especially sports and music as well as academic studies [and lots of Nobel prizes]. It might surprise you to know that there is still a flourishing Cambridge University Draghounds, for example, even though Oxford tried to change the name of the Christ Church Beagles out of embarrassment.
But the political/activist side of both Unis has produced only one leader of note, and very few useful politcians. The Ox and Cam Unions train undergraduates how to grandstand and win power, but not what to do when they’ve won it. Ergo, my suggstion that Unions have failed, and might as well be disbanded
I am beginning, grudgingly, to have some sympathy for Pol Pot’s policy of shutting the universities and sending the elites into the fields and rice paddies.
About 90% of those at “uni” shouldn’t be there (Blair’s doing) – formerly most of them would be in factories, shipyards, mines, or on farms labouring. We were better off as a Country for it too.
Such organisations only have a point if they behave in a fair and even-handed fashion. Once upon a time various university Unions did exactly that, more recently they do not because it seems that their officers have not accepted the behavioural expectations of their positions.
As such the only solution is to disband them and heavily publicise the reasons why together with ensuring that every officer has their opinions and their home addresses widely circulated.
And a hefty kick in the fork.
As an alumni, I have viewed the appropriation of Universities by the Russell group as dangerous. It has clear political motives, secured by finance. The Cambridge Union is a debating society, membership is optional. I did not join, preferring another club.
Disregard votes by these members. Hopefully after they leave they will regain their senses.
As a right wing professional artist (classical musician) I just cannot wait for it to dawn on woke lefty intimidators that dance, music-making, and visual art may well be severely restricted if it engenders “anti-Muslim hate”. Great work, Toby.
It is *many* years beyond the time when universities, schools and other educational establishments should have been heavily clamped down on for suppressing/lack of support for free speech. So many years, in fact, that free speech suppression is now the expected norm, and if you don’t support suppression, you are part of the problem.
The Left have taken over. Reversal of this situation will not come about with the Uniparty. Whoever does find themselves in a position to do something about it will have to make sure substantial fines are imposed and jobs are lost for such suppression.
This 2min clip covers it. I think the amount of people of this ilk who were supportive ( even celebratory ) when Charlie Kirk was murdered speaks to how truly lost and psychopathic many have become nowadays. The fact many felt his killing was justified because he advocated for free speech whilst being overtly opposed to all things woke, for instance, is frightening;
”The Five Steps of Leftist Radicalization:
First, safe spaces. The 2010-2015 era. – People needed to be “protected” from “harmful” ideas.
Second, cancel culture. The 2016-2020 era. – Social status removed from those with “harmful” ideas.
Third, censorship. The 2021-2023 era. – Those with “harmful” ideas no longer allowed to speak.
Fourth, structural exile. 2023-2025 era. – Your credential, career, or license dependent on ideological alignment. (Important to note human psyche equates exile with death).
Fifth, direct violence normalized. 2025 and onwards. – Post Kirk assassination, the Leftist psyche fully accepts lethal violence against political opponents.
And if this movement continues to radicalize, the next stage is predictable: collective violence—group against group.”
https://x.com/liam_out_loud/status/2034663514678153281
According the those in the Progressive Left right wing thought is to be made illegitimate and even criminalised. We are all to buy into the whole left wing package or we are to be banished from all of polite society. —-We must support Net Zero, Palestine, the EU, men in our daughters toilet and we must think Trump is an idiot. —-If not then there must be something wrong with us. But it is not the right that want to stop the left from having a leftists world view. It is the left that want to stop us not having ours. We are the ones being silenced, banned and even jailed for something we may have said online that does not align with leftist dogma.
Yes, absolutely correct Varmint. As a woman who loves a certain craft skill that I have been practicing for the past 15 years I mix with many left-wing idealogues. I really don’t feel I can speak out about my views for fear of ostracism from this group, who are largely women. I certainly feel silenced. It is a small thing, but I certainly feel the pressure, even there. Thanks Toby, yet again, for fighting our corner.
When I was about 17 I used to watch Question Time. At first it seemed that all of the left wing people seemed to be talking some sense. They spoke of inequality, and fairness. When you are young it seems that fairness is something everyone should want. But then I started to ask myself things like “Is thousands of people spending 12 years on Methadone fair”? Is it fair that many hundreds of thousands of people don’t work and have no intention of working”? Is it fair that we were taken into the EEC (EU) in 1973 with no referendum, and were promised “no essential loss of sovereignty, which ofcourse was a bare faced lie”?——-Fair according to who?—–Today is it fair that hundreds of thousands of migrants simply turn up expecting to be housed and fed? Fair to who? Is it fair that we pay the highest electricity prices in the world because of NET ZERO,which was simply waved through Parliament in 2019 with no discussion of cost benefit and no VOTE? —-Who is that fair to? Certainly not the millions of people forced into energy poverty, or the hundreds of thousands of people losing their jobs in gas and… Read more »
Some useful idiots on the “left” might believe this, but in my view mainly the issue is more like “freedom of expression threatens the ability of people on the left to impose their views on everyone and tell people what to do, usually paid for with other people’s money”.
Pull the bloody building down
Sampson, where are you in our hour of need?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RMwTK6IgXUo
Was the voting on the motion anonymous or in plain sight? If in plain sight peer pressure may have had an influence.
The vote would have gone the same way with no ‘debate’. Ideology, not inquiry in today’s youth brainwashing system extended over the past century from a school leaving age of 12 (my grandmother left school in Belfast to work in a lace.factory) to 15 (my parents) to 16 (my gen) to 18 (my children) and really now 21 because everyone is funnelled into debt slavery via “UNI” permanently pickled in Marxist ideology.
They did, at least, go through the motions of graciously allowing you to put your argument. But the result of the debate was decided long before you even opened your mouth Toby.
Evidence, pah, who needs it when you are virtuous.
Well done Tobes very brave of you going into the Lions Den.
Respectfully, I would suggest an attack on the pillars that support the self-righteous beliefs of those on the Left, rather appealing to the Centre or trying to defend what they’ve already dismissed. Make those who hold different views aware of the origins of those views and why they must need to be intolerant of opposition. Shock them by exposing the roots of Fabianism, Theosophy, Cultural Marxism, Critical Theory – and the lifestyles of those who first promulgated those ideas.