On March 17, 2026, Columbia University Statistics professor Andrew Gelman blogs:
Paul Campos expresses irritation at Adrian Vermeule, the fascist-supporting Harvard professor. I feel that irritation; indeed, I share it (see also here).
But I also want to draw an analogy, to the communist academics of the mid-twentieth century. Last year I wrote a post, Props to the liberal anticommunists of the 1930s-1950s, arguing that those people don’t get the credit they deserve for putting in the political effort to marginalize the communists who were trying to infiltrate American organizations. This all became clearer to me in retrospect, seeing the successful far-right takeover of the Republican party in recent years.
Anyway, back to the academics. It may seem wrong for prominent academics to hold fascist positions–but we’re used to prominent academics holding communist positions in the past. The main difference is that, nowadays, supporting fascism can be a path to power and influence, whereas back in the middle of the twentieth century, supporting communism in this country might give you connections through backroom channels but it wouldn’t be something you’d want to do in public.
Andrew adds in the comments section:
I don’t remember the details because I wrote this post awhile ago. In his post, Campos links to a post by Vermeule that seems to have been taken down. I’ve never met or corresponded with Vermeule; from what I’ve read, my take is that his political views are comparable to academic communists of the mid-twentieth century, in the sense that he takes some very extreme positions, perhaps secure in the feeling that it’s all talk and it won’t really happen. Just like the American Maoists who kinda liked the idea of the Cultural Revolution but didn’t think that they would themselves be sent to work on the farms or whatever.
You use the term “alternate reality,” and I agree there’s some of that (for example in Vermeule’s election denial), but I think it’s more that law students and law professors are often pushed to take extreme, boundary-pushing positions (for example, “Should Trees Have Standing?”) as that gets them attention. I’m bothered when law professors are promoting election denial and disturbing when they are promoting fascist ideas–I’m also bothered by the promotion of communism by some influential Americans in the twentieth century–and I think part of this is alternate reality, but to me it seems more like political extremism leading to a willed ignorance. Just as those communists didn’t want to hear about the bad things going on in the Soviet Union, Vermeule may be working very hard to maintain a state of ignorance so that he can promote election denial and dubious constitutional theories. I don’t think this has anything to do with “DNC-propaganda” except for the extent that Vermeule might want to use the DNC as some sort of boogeyman that would justify his extremism as a response to that.
Turn of the 90s responds: “I don’t know much Vermeule and, based on my read of Campos’ post, it doesn’t sound like I’d agree with and maybe even respect most of his views. But when you call someone out for being a fascist – or anything really – and then when being asked for evidence to back up that claim, you can’t just reply “I’m not sure.” You must have had reasons for writing what you did. Your response will only give fuel to those who want to raise up someone like Vermuele by showing how the other side can’t even argue against them.”
Andrew Gelman is not a culture warrior. That matters. When a statistician at Columbia who built his reputation on methodological precision and relentless skepticism of overclaiming starts invoking Nazis and calling a Harvard law professor a fascist, something structural has shifted. He has not lost his mind. He has changed roles. Read through David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory, which treats moral and political beliefs as emergent properties of coalition logic rather than fixed commitments to truth, Gelman’s escalation becomes entirely legible.
Start with where Gelman normally sits. He occupies a specific niche inside elite academia: empiricist, anti-bullshit, broadly liberal but not doctrinaire, committed to open inquiry and institutional trust. His blog, Statistical Modeling, Causal Inference, and Social Science, polices sloppy methods, overconfident claims, and institutional hype across the political spectrum. His usual function is intra-coalition critic. He does not typically police ideology. That baseline makes the shift all the more revealing when it comes.
On March 17, 2026, Gelman posted “Fascist academics today and communist academics in the 1930s–1950s.” He opens with the classic Linda probability puzzle, substituting “active in the fascist movement” for bank teller, then names Vermeule directly as the “fascist-supporting Harvard professor.” He links to a Lawyers, Guns and Money post by Paul Campos framing Vermeule’s Common Good Constitutionalism as a move toward hierarchy over equality, one that Campos connects, through the logic of “No Enemies to the Right,” to Nick Fuentes-style politics. Gelman shares the irritation and extends it into historical analogy. Just as liberal anticommunists once worked to marginalize academics who lent intellectual legitimacy to authoritarian movements, he argues, today’s proceduralists must do the same with fascist-leaning ones. The critical difference he identifies is that supporting post-liberal integralism now offers a genuine path to institutional power, given the far-right’s capture of the Republican Party, whereas communism in mid-century America was mostly career-limiting when public. That asymmetry is what makes the present moment feel urgent to him rather than merely comparable.
Vermeule’s project, Common Good Constitutionalism, subordinates liberal proceduralism to a substantive, hierarchically ordered moral vision. The state, in this framework, should actively direct society toward specific ends rather than remain neutral among competing conceptions of the good life. From inside Gelman’s coalition, built around scientific proceduralism and the postwar liberal settlement, this is not merely a wrong argument. It is a proposed rewrite of the rules by which his coalition holds authority. It threatens to replace decentralized, evidence-based scrutiny, the mechanism that gives empiricists like Gelman their status advantage, with centralized moral authority. When a high-status node inside elite institutions begins legitimizing that shift, the coalition does not debate. It enforces.
In Alliance Theory terms, “fascist” here functions as a coordination signal, not a precise analytic category. Gelman does not offer a careful definition when pressed in comments. He does not need to. The label does three things simultaneously. It raises the stakes to regime-level threat. It justifies bypassing the normal academic norms of collegial engagement. And it forces side-taking across the network. Fail to distance yourself from the labeled figure and you become a suspected sympathizer. The communist analogy works identically. Gelman is not primarily making a historical claim about 1930s Germany. He is issuing a cascade warning: respectable intellectuals once lent legitimacy to rising authoritarian movements, those movements converted institutional access into political power, and complacency made it possible. By invoking the memory of liberal anticommunists who pushed back, he tells his coalition that the sequence is happening again.
The earlier posts establish the pattern. In 2023 Gelman critiqued Vermeule’s proposals around libertarian paternalism and cognitive infiltration of dissident groups. In 2024 he compared Vermeule’s election-fraud endorsements to 1960s Mao-cheerleading. The irony the later post implicitly registers is sharp: Vermeule once argued for state infiltration of extremist groups, then moved toward endorsing the political movements such infiltration was designed to contain. Gelman reads this not as contradiction but as the classic fellow-traveler move, playing with dangerous ideas for contrarian or careerist reasons while the coalition’s norms erode around him.
Notice what Gelman refuses to do across all these posts. He does not say Vermeule’s arguments have flaws worth debating. That would legitimize the opponent and invite the kind of ordinary intellectual exchange that coalitions avoid when sacred pillars are threatened. Strong moral language instead activates emotions, converts private discomfort into public obligation, and lowers coordination costs for lower-status members of the coalition. Graduate students and junior faculty can join the response without being seen as initiating a fight. They follow a credible leader. And Gelman is credible precisely because he is not a natural partisan. A reluctant enforcer calling someone a fascist reads as a threshold signal, evidence that the threat has crossed from fringe to mainstream-elite, not as culture war posturing.
The contrast with Nathan Cofnas sharpens the structural logic. Cofnas threatened the equality pillar, the coalition’s commitment to the proposition that group disparities reflect injustice rather than innate difference. He received the “racist and pseudoscience” treatment, a combination designed for rapid excision before tenure. Vermeule, already tenured at Harvard, threatens the liberal-democratic pillar, the commitment to constrained power, pluralism, and procedural neutrality. He receives the “fascist” label plus historical analogy, the treatment designed to make him radioactive so that other elites treat engagement as a professional liability. Same enforcement machinery, different threat classifier, different target status, different tactic.
What the rhetoric does not do is refute Vermeule’s substantive arguments. It does not need to. This is not a debate. It is boundary maintenance. The question Gelman answers is not whether Vermeule is right but whether elite academia can host arguments for hierarchical, illiberal political orders without treating them as disqualifying. His answer is no, expressed not through counter-argument but through the classic tools of coalition enforcement: loaded labels, historical memory, implicit loyalty tests, and public commitment that signals to everyone watching that the boundary is real and the costs of crossing it are serious.
The system Gelman defends did not build its two pillars, equality and liberal democracy, out of pure principle. Both crystallized in the postwar settlement, a set of coordination rules Western elites adopted after ethnic hierarchy and unconstrained state power produced catastrophe on a continental scale. Those rules became embedded in institutions, credentialing systems, and the status hierarchies from which people like Gelman derive their authority. Challenges to either pillar do not register as intellectual provocations. They register as threats to the conditions of the coalition’s stability, and they produce responses scaled accordingly.
Viewed through Alliance Theory, Gelman’s posts are not hypocrisy or hysteria. They are the immune system responding to a high-status defector with real institutional mass. The aggressive language, the fascist label, the communist analogy, the warning about power cascades, is the sound of a coalition defending its procedural and moral perimeter when that perimeter is under direct assault. Once you map the role, the tone is no longer disproportionate. It is exactly what the enforcer position demands.
