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Politics & Power Quote by Paul Begala

"There's the great line: the definition of a liberal is someone who's afraid to take their own side in a fight. And that's my problem with my fellow liberals"

About this Quote

Begala’s jab lands because it weaponizes a familiar schoolyard image - a fight - to indict what he sees as liberal self-sabotage. The phrasing is built for TV: “great line,” “definition,” “in a fight.” It’s not a policy argument; it’s a character test. By casting politics as conflict rather than deliberation, he flips a stereotype liberals often wrestle with: overthinking, qualifying, triangulating, apologizing for wanting to win.

The subtext is intra-family frustration. “My fellow liberals” is doing double duty: it signals credibility (I’m one of you) while giving permission to scold. He’s not attacking liberal values; he’s attacking liberal posture - the impulse to hedge, to grant the other side moral seriousness even when the other side is playing for dominance. In that sense, the line is less about ideology than about narrative discipline: who gets to define the terms of the debate, who speaks with confidence, who looks like they believe their own case.

Contextually, Begala comes out of the Clinton-era Democratic wars over toughness and messaging - an era when Republicans were often seen as more unified and combative, and Democrats as eager to be fair-minded to a fault. The quote taps that era’s anxiety: that liberals can be correct on the merits and still lose the public fight because they won’t commit to their own side as a side. It’s a critique of liberalism as temperament, not doctrine - and that’s why it stings.

Quote Details

TopicSarcastic
SourceHelp us find the source
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Begala, Paul. (2026, January 15). There's the great line: the definition of a liberal is someone who's afraid to take their own side in a fight. And that's my problem with my fellow liberals. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/theres-the-great-line-the-definition-of-a-liberal-68697/

Chicago Style
Begala, Paul. "There's the great line: the definition of a liberal is someone who's afraid to take their own side in a fight. And that's my problem with my fellow liberals." FixQuotes. January 15, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/theres-the-great-line-the-definition-of-a-liberal-68697/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"There's the great line: the definition of a liberal is someone who's afraid to take their own side in a fight. And that's my problem with my fellow liberals." FixQuotes, 15 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/theres-the-great-line-the-definition-of-a-liberal-68697/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

More Quotes by Paul Add to List
A Liberal is Someone Afraid to Take Their Own Side in a Fight
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About the Author

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Paul Begala (born May 12, 1961) is a Journalist from USA.

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