Matt Goodwin
Matt Goodwin | |
|---|---|
Goodwin in 2026 | |
| Born | December 1981 (age 44) St Albans, Hertfordshire, England |
| Political party | Reform UK |
| Spouse |
Fiona McAdoo
(m. 2016; div. 2026) |
| Partner | Eilidh Hargreaves |
| Children | 1 |
| Academic background | |
| Alma mater | |
| Doctoral advisor | Roger Eatwell |
| Academic work | |
| Discipline | Political science |
| Institutions | |
| Website | www |
Matthew James Goodwin (born December 1981) is a British conservative[1] political commentator, right-wing activist,[2] political scientist and former academic, recognised for his research on right-wing movements and right-wing populism in the United Kingdom. He is a presenter on GB News,[3] and the honorary president of Reform UK's student wing, Students Reform. He unsuccessfully stood for election in the constituency of Gorton and Denton in a by-election following his nomination by Reform UK.[4]
Goodwin's most recent academic role was as a professor of politics in the School of Politics and International Relations at the University of Kent, where he was employed for nine years before departing in July 2024. He also served on the Social Mobility Commission from September 2022 to 2023. He is the author of two Sunday Times Best Sellers: National Populism: The Revolt Against Liberal Democracy (co-authored with Roger Eatwell)[5] and Values, Voice and Virtue: The New British Politics.[6] He is also the co-author of Revolt on the Right: Explaining Support for the Radical Right in Britain (with Robert Ford), which was long-listed for the 2015 Orwell Prize.[7]
Initially an academic commentator on right-wing and far-right politics in the 2000s and 2010s, by the mid 2020s Goodwin had come to be known for his espousing of strong right-wing views similar to those which he had previously studied and criticised.[8][9][10][11]
Early life and education
Goodwin was born in December 1981 in St Albans, Hertfordshire, where he was raised by a single mother.[12][3][13] His parents split when he was five years old and he has stated that "money was always a problem" in what he described as a "working-class family".[14] Former colleagues of Goodwin have been described by The Times as "somewhat sceptical of this narrative, alleging a hint of self-fashioning", saying, "He's not working class" and "The idea he is some kind of horny-handed son of toil is ridiculous."[14] His father was a senior NHS executive whose roles included Chief Executive of the Greater Manchester Strategic Health Authority.[15][16][14] His mother worked for their local NHS health board.[14]
In 2003, Goodwin graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in politics and contemporary history from the University of Salford, at which he was offered a place through clearing.[14] He obtained a Master of Arts degree in political science from the University of Western Ontario in 2004, and completed his Doctor of Philosophy degree under the supervision of Roger Eatwell at the University of Bath in 2007.[17]
Career
Academic
Goodwin was a research fellow at the Institute for Political and Economic Governance at the University of Manchester from 2008 to 2010 and then an associate professor of politics at the University of Nottingham from 2010 to 2015. From 2015 to 2024, he was professor of politics in the School of Politics and International Relations at the University of Kent.[18] According to journalist James Ball, teaching at Kent involved a long commute from London for Goodwin and, around 2016, he tried to secure a professorship at London universities.[19]
Goodwin took voluntary severance and left the University of Kent on 31 July 2024.[20][19] He said that voluntary severance "made sense for me, as someone in their forties who has done a long stint at universities. Bad actors are trying to imply that I have left because of my views on current events. That is very much not the case".[20] His research has covered a range of topics, including Brexit, British politics, the implications of rising ethnic diversity in the West, and the future of Europe.[21] In 2018, Goodwin published National Populism: The Revolt Against Liberal Democracy (co-authored with Roger Eatwell), which discussed factors that contributed to Brexit.[22]
Other work
Alongside his academic positions, Goodwin was associate fellow at Chatham House between 2010 and 2020, where he authored research reports on the rise of populism,[23] Euroscepticism ahead of the Brexit vote,[24] the different political tribes of Europe,[25] and the future of Europe.[26] He is a former senior fellow at the think tank UK in a Changing Europe. In 2021 he was appointed as the founding director of the Centre for UK Prosperity within the Legatum Institute,[27][28] where he remains a Fellow,[29] leaving in 2023. In February 2026, The Times reported that Goodwin had left Legatum after the report he had been hired to work on was exposed as very poor quality. Goodwin dismissed this as "utter nonsense". Legatum confirmed that the project was abandoned due to a "wholesale re-evaluation of the methodology."[30]
Goodwin is on the advisory panel of the Free Speech Union,[31][32] a group that seeks to "counter Twitter mobs that drown out opinions they dislike".[33] Goodwin has served as specialist adviser to the House of Commons Education Select Committee on left-behind pupils, and has given evidence to a Public Bill Committee on the importance of defending academic freedom in universities.[34] In 2023, the New Statesman named him as the 43rd–most powerful right-wing British political figure of the year.[35] In December 2025, Goodwin was an inaugural guest on Liz Truss' new YouTube series, The Liz Truss Show.[36][37] In 2025, Goodwin joined Jacob Rees-Mogg as a presenter of State of the Nation on GB News, replacing Rees-Mogg on Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays.[38]
Political candidacy
On 27 January 2026, Goodwin was announced as the Reform UK candidate for the 2026 Gorton and Denton by-election.[39] His candidacy was endorsed by British far-right activist Tommy Robinson. In response to the endorsement, a Reform spokesperson said of Robinson: "We have consistently been clear on this issue. He isn't welcome in the party."[40]
Goodwin was unsuccessful in his bid to be elected, finishing second to Hannah Spencer of the Green Party, who gained 40.6% of the vote against Goodwin's 28.7%. Labour finished in third place.[41] Following the result Goodwin said: "I think we've embarrassed Labour in one of their strongest seats. The Greens can only do this in 20–30 seats in the country. We can deliver these kinds of results everywhere."[42] He subsequently wrote on X that "We are losing our country. A dangerous Muslim sectarianism has emerged. We have only one general election left to save Britain. Vote Reform every chance you get. I will continue the fight. I will always fight for you. I will stand at the next general election."[43]
Senior figures in the party defended the decision to make Goodwin, who was seen as divisive by many, its candidate.[44]
Commentary
Goodwin's research and writings focus on British politics, radical-right politics, and Euroscepticism.[45] Observers have suggested that Goodwin's political views have shifted considerably rightwards over the course of his career, from centre right initially to ethnonationalist, anti-immigration right-wing populism by the mid 2020s, having come to resemble the views he had originally studied and criticised.[8][46][11]
A major theme of Goodwin's work has been to explain what he calls "the realignment" of British politics that has seen the Labour Party becoming more dependent on the liberal, metropolitan middle-class for its votes, while the Conservative Party has appealed increasingly to working-class, non-university educated voters in former Labour heartlands (the "red wall").[47] Goodwin recommends that political parties "lean into" this realignment by moving "left on economics and right on culture".[48][49][50] On the morning after the Conservatives under Boris Johnson won the 2019 United Kingdom general election, Goodwin tweeted: "it is easier for the right to move left on economics than it is for the left to move right on identity & culture."[51] Kenan Malik wrote that this view was based on an assumption that working-class people are socially conservative, and "the trouble with this argument is that the key feature of Britain over the past half century has been not social conservatism but an extraordinary liberalisation", citing examples such as attitudes to sexuality, premarital sex, and interracial relationships.[51]
Goodwin also criticised the response of the "liberal left" following Brexit, stating: "This intolerance became most visible in the aftermath of the vote for Brexit when I watched many people on the 'liberal' left berate much of the rest of the country as an assortment of racists, bigots, gammons, and morons, all the while making it abundantly clear they had never actually met any of them." He was also critical of what he perceived as radical progressives' shift from liberalism to authoritarianism and silencing of opposing views.[52]
In May 2023, Gerry Hassan wrote that "Goodwin is the populist right's academic of choice, but it seems to have escaped his notice that in the past half century right-wing Tory Governments have been in office for three-quarters of the time."[46] Others have characterised Goodwin as a "populist academic",[53] stating that he turned from observer into participant, becoming an apologist for populism.[54][55][56][57][11] James Ball argues that it was around 2016, with the Brexit referendum and Donald Trump's election as US president, that "Goodwin's public persona began to transform from that of someone explaining how to counter populist and far-right movements to someone explaining them, justifying their ends, or acting as something of an apologist for them".[19]
Goodwin has been criticised for proposing on his blog that people who do not have children should be taxed, in the form of a "negative child benefit tax".[58][59]
On diversity, "wokeism" and racism
Goodwin and his National Populism co-author Roger Eatwell, writing about the United States, have argued that political polarisation has been caused by "an increasing fixation or near-total obsession among Democrats and the liberal left with race, gender and 'diversity'".[5] In 2018, Goodwin, along with other commentators including Eric Kaufmann, Claire Fox, Trevor Phillips and David Aaronovitch, was due to take part in an event titled "Is Rising Ethnic Diversity a Threat to the West?" Some researchers argued that the event would encourage "normalisation of far right ideas" and criticised the framing of the title;[60][61][62] the debate was retitled "Immigration and Diversity Politics: A Challenge to Liberal Democracy?".[63]
According to Huw Davies and Sheena MacRae, Goodwin's "concerns about wokeism are a recurrent theme in his output". Goodwin has described "wokeism" as "a pseudo-religion". He has acted as an adviser to the Conservative Party and in the July–September 2022 Conservative Party leadership election supported "anti-woke campaigner" Kemi Badenoch, referring to her as "one of the most interesting Conservatives in British politics for a very long time". He supported the Conservative government's Rwanda asylum plan, which would entail deporting asylum seekers to Rwanda,[31] and has advised the party to raise "the salience of cultural issues". Kenan Malik argues that Goodwin now advocates a politics that a decade earlier he would have described as "toxic".[64]
In 2021, when the Commission on Race and Ethnic Disparities, commissioned by Boris Johnson and chaired by Tony Sewell, argued that structural racism did not exist in the UK, Goodwin said this "dismantles the woke mob's central claim that we are living in a fundamentally racist society".[31] Goodwin has also highlighted various instances of public funding for initiatives that he views as symptomatic of this cultural shift.[65]
National Conservativism and UK riots
Goodwin spoke at the 2023 National Conservatism Conference,[66][67] where he described the Conservative Party as being in a "prolonged death spiral".[68] Goodwin told CNN that conservatives needed to "decide who they are and what they want to be".[69] For The Atlantic, Helen Lewis wrote that Goodwin gave "a typically doomy speech", which "segued into 10 minutes of pure populist beat poetry".[70] David Aaronovitch described Goodwin's speech as one of the two most "politically coherent" of the conference, calling him "the politics professor turned political entrepreneur".[71] Goodwin has responded to such criticisms in his writings, including in his articles "What Happened To Me?"[52] and "Have I 'radicalised'?".[72] Explaining his decision to participate in the conference, Goodwin wrote: "I'm not a member of the Conservative Party. And unless something changes I don't currently plan on voting Conservative at the next election." He explained that his decision was because "one of the most interesting and important debates in politics right now is where conservatism goes next – not only here in Britain but globally."[73]
During the 2024 United Kingdom riots that followed the 2024 Southport stabbing, Goodwin criticised commentators who labelled the groups engaged in the violence as "far right", writing on X that there had been a "concerted & most likely coordinated effort by the elite class to inflate 'far right' to stigmatise & silence millions of ordinary people who object to mass immigration and its effects". Goodwin praised Hungary under prime minister Viktor Orbán, which he described as having "no crime", "no homeless people", "no riots" and "no unrest". Conservative commentator Tim Montgomerie called Goodwin's posts "incendiary",[20] and ITV News's Joel Hills asked: "Matt, are you still at the University of Kent? I ask because it's so hard to imagine a serious academic publishing something like this."[20] Robert Ford, with whom Goodwin wrote Revolt on the Right in 2014, had by August 2024 "ended contact with Goodwin", saying "I tried for several years to reason with him on this but to no avail. Once I could see where this was heading I cut ties and became a more public critic".[19]
Goodwin maintains that immigration to the UK constitutes an "invasion". In a 2024 debate on immigration with Al Jazeera's Mehdi Hasan, Hasan remarked that Goodwin has "gone native".[1] After the 2025 Cambridgeshire train stabbing was reported in the news, Goodwin posted on X that "mass uncontrolled immigration" was to blame. When someone responded that the suspect, Anthony Williams, was born in the UK, Goodwin replied "So were all of the 7/7 bombers. It takes more than a piece of paper to make somebody 'British'". He was subsequently accused by the Liberal Democrats' home affairs spokesperson, Max Wilkinson, of using racist rhetoric. Goodwin responded by stating: "What I said isn't racist. They devalue the term by saying this."[4]
Political predictions
On 27 May 2017, Goodwin predicted that the Labour Party would not reach 38 per cent of the vote in the 2017 United Kingdom general election and said he would eat his book if they did.[74] As the party won 40.0% of the popular vote, Goodwin chewed one page out of his book, live on Sky News, on 10 June 2017.[75]
In March 2024, Goodwin wrote in The Sun: "Eight years ago I did some political fortune-telling that led to people thinking I was insane. I was one of only a few analysts who predicted that not only would Britain vote to leave the EU but also that America would elect President Donald Trump."[19] Will Jennings of the University of Southampton said that when speaking at an event at the London School of Economics on the day of the Brexit referendum, Goodwin actually predicted a two-point Remain win.[19]
While Goodwin gave Trump a better chance of winning in the 2016 US presidential election than some pundits, he nonetheless wrote that Trump "would most likely fail".[19] Goodwin also incorrectly predicted that Trump would win the 2020 election.[19]
Personal life
Goodwin lives in Hitchin, Hertfordshire.[3][76][77] He was married to Fiona McAdoo from 2016 to 2026, and they have one daughter together.[78] They separated in 2023. His current partner is Eilidh Hargreaves, a journalist at Tatler, whom he met at the 2025 Spectator Awards.[79]
Books
- Goodwin, Matthew (2011). New British Fascism: The Rise of the British National Party. Routledge. ISBN 978-0415465007.
- Ford, Robert; Goodwin, Matthew (2014). Revolt on the Right: Explaining Support for the Radical Right in Britain. Routledge. ISBN 9780415661508.
- Goodwin, Matthew; Milazzo, Caitlin (2015). UKIP: Inside the Campaign to Redraw the Map of British Politics. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198736110.
- Clarke, Harold D.; Goodwin, Matthew; Whiteley, Paul (2017). Brexit: Why Britain Voted to Leave the European Union. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781316605042.
- Eatwell, Roger; Goodwin, Matthew (2018). National Populism: The Revolt Against Liberal Democracy. Pelican Books. ISBN 9780241312001.
- Goodwin, Matthew (2023). Values, Voice and Virtue: The New British Politics. Penguin Books. ISBN 9780141999098.
- Goodwin, Matthew (2025). Bad Education: Why Our Universities Are Broken and How We Can Fix Them. Penguin Books. ISBN 9781787635241.
Honours
In 2014, aged 33, Goodwin was awarded the Richard Rose Prize by the Political Studies Association, which is given to one early-career academic each year for their contribution to research.[80] The award was made at the organisation's conference on 14–16 April[81] and Goodwin was appointed their director on 27 June, resigning on 24 June 2016.[82] He co-authored the book Revolt on the Right: Explaining Support for the Radical Right in Britain, which was long-listed for the 2015 Orwell Prize.[7]
References
- ^ a b Immigration, populism and the far right: Mehdi Hasan & Matthew Goodwin | Head to Head. Al Jazeera English. 17 October 2024. Retrieved 23 February 2025 – via YouTube.
- ^ Stavrou, Athena (27 January 2026). "Matt Goodwin unveiled as Reform UK candidate for Gorton and Denton by-election". The Independent. Retrieved 27 January 2026.
- ^ a b c Bloodworth, James (16 July 2025). "Matthew Goodwin, Reform and the politics of resentment". Prospect. Retrieved 27 January 2026.
- ^ a b Walker, Peter (13 November 2025). "Reform UK accused of embracing racism over its pick for head of student organisation". The Guardian. Retrieved 13 November 2025.
- ^ a b "White is the new black: populism and the academic alt-right". openDemocracy. 2 January 2019. Retrieved 22 August 2023.
- ^ Gilbert, Jeremy; Williams, Alex (2025). "The Vices of Values: Matthew Goodwin and the Politics of Motivation". The Political Quarterly. 96 (3): 504–512. doi:10.1111/1467-923X.13555. ISSN 0032-3179.
- ^ a b "Revolt on the Right". Orwell Foundation. Retrieved 16 October 2024.
- ^ a b Boffey, Daniel (30 January 2026). "'It's about ego': Matt Goodwin's journey from far-right expert to firebrand Reform candidate". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 12 February 2026.
- ^ Rubinstein, Samuel (11 February 2026). "Matt Goodwin's road to Reform". UnHerd. Retrieved 12 February 2026.
- ^ Glancy, Josh (31 January 2026). "The reinvention of Matt Goodwin, from professor to Reform radical". www.thetimes.com. Retrieved 12 February 2026.
- ^ a b c Eagleton, Oliver (25 March 2023). "Going native". The New Statesman. Retrieved 21 August 2023.
- ^ Goodwin, Matthew [@goodwinmj] (1 December 2025). "I am 44 this month. For the first time in my life I feel like I am living in a country that actually despises the hardworking British majority" (Tweet) – via X (formerly Twitter).
- ^ "Matthew Goodwin". London Speaker Bureau. Retrieved 27 January 2026.
Matt was born and raised in St Albans, Hertfordshire
- ^ a b c d e Glancy, Josh (31 January 2026). "Did a dinner snub light the right-wing fire in Matt Goodwin?". The Times. Retrieved 31 January 2026.
- ^ "Matthew Goodwin post on X". X. 28 January 2026.
- ^ Goodwin, Matthew (19 August 2022). "Out of Office, Out of Sight".
- ^ "Matthew Goodwin". The Conversation. 5 July 2013. Retrieved 7 January 2021.
- ^ "Professor Matthew Goodwin". Chatham House. 2016. Retrieved 6 October 2016.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Ball, James (7 August 2024). "Matt Goodwin's fall into the abyss". The New European.
- ^ a b c d Williams, Tom (8 August 2024). "Matthew Goodwin 'still an academic' despite leaving Kent role". Times Higher Education (THE). Retrieved 8 August 2024.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link) - ^ "Matthew Goodwin". scholar.google.com. Retrieved 22 October 2024.
- ^ "Two new books explain the Brexit revolt". The Economist. 3 November 2018. ISSN 0013-0613. Retrieved 22 October 2024.
- ^ Goodwin, Matthew (September 2011). "Right Response: Understanding and Countering Populist Extremism in Europe" (PDF). Chatham House. Retrieved 3 February 2022.
- ^ Goodwin, Matthew; Milazzo, Caitlin (December 2015). "Britain, the European Union and the Referendum: What Drives Euroscepticism?" (PDF). Chatham House. Retrieved 3 February 2022.
- ^ Raines, Thomas; Goodwin, Matthew; Cutts, David (December 2017). "Europe's Political Tribes: Exploring the Diversity of Views Across the EU" (PDF). Chatham House. Retrieved 3 February 2022.
- ^ Raines, Thomas; Goodwin, Matthew; Cutts, David (June 2017). "The Future of Europe: Comparing Public and Elite Attitudes" (PDF). Chatham House. Retrieved 3 February 2022.
- ^ "Legatum Institute launches new Centre for UK Prosperity". Legatum Institute. 2020. Archived from the original on 12 September 2022. Retrieved 31 August 2022.
- ^ Bland, Archie (14 April 2023). "Friday briefing: Has a 'woke aristocracy' really taken control of British society?". The Guardian. Retrieved 22 August 2023.
- ^ "About Matt Goodwin". Matt Goodwin. Retrieved 4 June 2025.
- ^ Bannerman, Lucy (20 February 2026). "Matt Goodwin's academic project was debunked as 'total garbage'". The Times. Retrieved 23 February 2026.
- ^ a b c C. Davies, Huw; MacRae, Sheena E. (15 May 2023). "An anatomy of the British war on woke". Race & Class. 65 (2). SAGE Publications: 3–54. doi:10.1177/03063968231164905. hdl:20.500.11820/88a2ddbe-bfd1-4c48-9a86-51aeceb41a81. ISSN 0306-3968. S2CID 258736793.
- ^ "Who We Are". The Free Speech Union. Archived from the original on 7 August 2020. Retrieved 24 February 2020.
- ^ Simpson, John (17 September 2023). "Free speech union fights Twitter 'witch‑hunts'". The Times.
- ^ "They work for you". Retrieved 3 February 2022.
- ^ New Statesman (27 September 2023). "The New Statesman's right power list". The New Statesman. Retrieved 14 December 2023.
- ^ Heritage, Stuart (5 December 2025). "The Liz Truss Show review – hapless ravings from a cupboard". The Guardian. Retrieved 6 December 2025.
- ^ Crace, John (6 December 2025). "Welcome to the Liz Truss chatshow, but beware: viewers may end up in survivor's therapy". The Guardian. Retrieved 6 December 2025.
- ^ "GB News makes 2025 programming announcement". GB News.
- ^ "Reform UK on X". 27 January 2026. Retrieved 31 January 2026.
- ^ Walker, Peter Senior political (30 January 2026). "Labour accuses Reform candidate of 'toxic politics' after Tommy Robinson endorsement". The Guardian.
- ^ Halliday, Josh (27 February 2026). "Green party wins Gorton and Denton byelection, pushing Labour to third place in blow to Keir Starmer". The Guardian.
- ^ Wilkinson, Damon (27 February 2026). "Matt Goodwin insists 'we've embarrassed Labour' despite defeat". Manchester Evening News.
- ^ Simpson, Greta (27 February 2026). "Reform's Matt Goodwin and Nigel Farage blame 'woke progressives, sectarian voting and Islamists' for by-election defeat". Manchester Evening News. Retrieved 28 February 2026.
- ^ Gross, Anna (27 February 2026). "Reform defends choice of Matthew Goodwin as its by-election candidate". Financial Times. Retrieved 28 February 2026.
- ^ "Matthew Goodwin". School of Politics and International Relations, University of Nottingham. Archived from the original on 15 July 2012.
- ^ a b Hassan, Gerry (16 May 2023). "The UK populist right has to be defeated or democracy will be trashed". Bella Caledonia. Retrieved 18 August 2023.
- ^ Cutts, David; Goodwin, Matthew; Heath, Oliver; Surridge, Paula (2020). "Brexit, the 2019 General Election and the Realignment of British Politics". The Political Quarterly. 91 (1). Wiley: 7–23. doi:10.1111/1467-923x.12815. ISSN 0032-3179. S2CID 214063692.
- ^ Rice, Gavin (31 July 2022). "The daring buds of May". The Critic Magazine. Retrieved 21 August 2023.
- ^ Payne, Sebastian. "Values, Voice and Virtue by Matthew Goodwin review — has the Tory party bungled the post-Brexit realignment?". The Times.
- ^ Garland, Nick (26 June 2023). "Nothing to fear". Renewal. Archived from the original on 21 August 2023. Retrieved 21 August 2023.
- ^ a b Malik, Kenan (22 December 2019). "The idea that the British working class is socially conservative is a nonsense". The Guardian. Retrieved 21 August 2023.
- ^ a b Goodwin, Matt (24 October 2023). "What Happened To Me?". www.mattgoodwin.org. Retrieved 16 October 2024.
- ^ Shaw, Martin (25 April 2023). "Professors, Power and Projection: the Case of Matthew Goodwin". Byline Times. Retrieved 22 August 2023.
- ^ Goodwin, Matthew (3 August 2020). "How universities shut out conservative academics". UnHerd. Retrieved 21 August 2023.
- ^ "Going native: Populist academics normalise the anti-immigrant right". Politics.co.uk. 31 October 2018. Retrieved 21 August 2023.
- ^ Hassan, Gerry (14 May 2023). "It's time for a long and hard look at the state of the UK's democracy". The National. Retrieved 21 August 2023.
- ^ Bloomfield, Jon. "Toxic Friends? A Critique of Blue Labour". The Political Quarterly. Retrieved 21 August 2023.
- ^ Nicholson, Kate (6 February 2026). "Reform By-Election Candidate Slammed For 'Handmaid's Tale' Suggestion". Huffpost UK. Retrieved 7 February 2026.
- ^ Cooke, Millie (6 February 2026). "Reform's by-election candidate suggested people who don't have children should pay more tax". The Independent. Retrieved 7 February 2026.
- ^ Smith, Evan (30 April 2020). No Platform: A History of Anti-Fascism, Universities and the Limits of Free Speech. Routledge. ISBN 978-1138591677.
Concerned about the increasing normalisation of far right ideas, over 200 scholars wrote an open letter criticising the event
- ^ "Framing ethnic diversity as a 'threat' will normalise far-right hate, say academics". openDemocracy. Retrieved 12 July 2023.
- ^ Freedland, Jonathan (26 October 2018). "Don't normalise the far right. But sometimes we must take it on". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 12 July 2023.
- ^ Göpffarth, Julian; Lorimer, Marta (8 November 2018). "Reflections on the 'open letter' debate: a middle way to approaching the radical right?". openDemocracy. Retrieved 12 July 2023.
- ^ Malik, Kenan (16 April 2023). "This obsession with a 'new elite' hides the real roots of power". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 August 2023.
- ^ Goodwin, Matt (29 August 2024). "Ten CRAZY things YOU are paying for right now". www.mattgoodwin.org. Retrieved 16 October 2024.
- ^ Lloyd, Will (24 May 2023). "The Tory crack-up". The New Statesman. Retrieved 18 August 2023.
- ^ Geoghegan, Peter (1 June 2023). "Peter Geoghegan · Short Cuts: At NatCon London · LRB 1 June 2023". London Review of Books. Vol. 45, no. 11. ISSN 0260-9592. Retrieved 18 August 2023.
- ^ Beckett, Andy (19 May 2023). "I went to the NatCon conference expecting sinister exuberance. But all I found was doom and gloom". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 18 August 2023.
- ^ McGee, Luke (18 May 2023). "Why are some British Conservatives behaving like the next election is already lost?". CNN. Retrieved 18 August 2023.
- ^ Lewis, Helen (18 May 2023). "Why So Many Conservatives Feel Like Losers". The Atlantic. Retrieved 18 August 2023.
- ^ Aaronovitch, David. "Flag, faith and failure: three days with the National Conservatives". Prospect. Retrieved 18 August 2023.
- ^ "Have I 'radicalised'?". www.mattgoodwin.org. 21 August 2024. Retrieved 16 October 2024.
- ^ Goodwin, Matt (28 May 2023). "Matt Goodwin: The revolution of liberal economics and woke cultural extremism has failed and left Britain broken". Belfast News Letter. Retrieved 21 August 2023.
- ^ "Matt Goodwin on X".
- ^ Media Mole (11 June 2017). "Watch: Politics expert Matthew Goodwin eats his own book on live TV after underestimating Labour". The New Statesman. London.
- ^ O’Grady, Sean (6 February 2026). "Is Matthew Goodwin too rabid even for Reform?". The Independent. Retrieved 7 February 2026.
- ^ Stannard, Tom (3 February 2026). "Statement of persons nominated: Gorton and Denton by-election" (PDF). Manchester City Council. Retrieved 7 February 2026.
- ^ Jones, Ros Wynne (20 February 2026). "Reform star's grim views in full - Muslim immigration ban to deportation horror". Daily Mirror. Retrieved 23 February 2026.
- ^ Leake, Natasha (22 February 2026). "Reform's Matthew Goodwin: 'I had a swastika put on my door for having Right-wing views'". The Telegraph. Retrieved 23 February 2026.
- ^ "Conference Highlights 2014". Political Studies Association.
- ^ "UK Political Studies Association Conference Panel on Anarchism and Radical Democracy". Social History Portal.
- ^ "Matthew GOODWIN personal appointments". GOV.UK. Companies House. Retrieved 25 February 2026.
External links
- Official website
- The Liz Truss Show (46' video). 5 December 2025 – via Just The News. Matt Goodwin on the first Liz Truss Show.