The Overton window has become one of the most overused metaphors in politics. It is usually described as the range of ideas that can be publicly advocated without destroying a politician’s credibility. But that definition is too static for the past decade. The more useful way to understand the window today is as a mechanism of social control: a constantly updated system for deciding which subjects may be discussed, which words may be used, which speakers may be heard, and which associations carry unacceptable risk.
That does not mean the window is controlled by a single committee. In liberal democracies, it is produced by a dispersed set of institutions and incentives. Political parties test what voters will reward. Newspapers and broadcasters decide which ideas deserve serious treatment and which belong in the category of extremism. Universities and think-tanks produce the language of legitimacy. Courts and regulators set outer legal limits. Employers and professional bodies attach career consequences to speech. Technology platforms determine what may be distributed at scale. Donors, advertisers and pressure groups raise or lower the cost of association.
The result is a political control system that works less by formal prohibition than by signalling. A subject inside the window can be debated. A subject near the edge can be raised with care. A subject outside the window is not merely wrong; it is treated as contaminating. The penalty for raising it may be reputational, professional, financial or algorithmic rather than legal. That distinction matters. A society can have formal free speech while still maintaining a powerful informal regime over what can be said without serious consequence.
For much of the post-cold war period, the western window was relatively narrow. Centre-left and centre-right parties disagreed over tax rates, welfare, public services and social policy, but both broadly accepted the same governing settlement: globalisation, market economics, managed migration, liberal social norms, central bank independence, Atlanticist foreign policy and the authority of expert institutions. The left had moved away from old-style socialism. The right had largely accommodated itself to the social changes of the late twentieth century. The political argument was real, but it took place inside a shared frame of respectability.
That frame began to crack after the financial crisis. The bailouts and the long stagnation that followed weakened confidence in the economic competence and moral authority of the governing class. On the left, the crisis revived arguments about inequality, corporate power, public ownership, banking, healthcare and redistribution. On the right, it fed suspicion of the state, resentment of immigration, hostility to supranational governance and a broader revolt against elites. The window widened because the old centre could no longer transmute public discontent into the same familiar answers.
The decisive rupture came in 2015 and 2016. Donald Trump and Brexit did not create the public’s unease about migration, sovereignty, deindustrialisation, political correctness or media power. They demonstrated that such unease could be turned into electoral victory. That was the shock. Views long treated by elite institutions as disqualifying were suddenly rewarded by voters. The right concluded that the old window had been artificially narrowed by gatekeepers. The left concluded that toxic forces had been released back into the mainstream.
Both interpretations describe part of the same process. When a previously forbidden subject becomes electorally useful, the political system is forced to reprice it. Immigration restriction, attacks on the media, scepticism of globalisation, hostility to progressive language codes and distrust of bureaucratic authority all moved from the margins towards the centre of rightwing politics. What had been dismissed as crude or dangerous became, for many voters, a sign of authenticity. The taboo itself became evidence that the speaker was telling the truth.
The institutional response was not simply to argue back. It was to reinforce the boundaries of legitimacy. Platforms expanded rules on hate speech, extremism and misinformation. Employers became more sensitive to reputational risk. Universities and publishers became more willing to treat certain speakers as beyond debate. Media organisations adopted a more explicit concern with “normalisation”. The question was no longer only whether a claim was true or false, but whether amplifying it would cause harm, launder extremism or shift public norms in a dangerous direction.
This is why the past decade often feels contradictory. The electoral window widened, especially on the right, while the institutional window narrowed in many elite settings. A politician could gain votes by saying things that a broadcaster, university, employer or platform might still treat as unacceptable. At the same time, progressive ideas about race, gender, policing, colonialism, climate and structural inequality moved rapidly from activist spaces into institutions. The left’s outer edge became more institutionally fluent, even as the right’s outer edge became more electorally potent.
The result is not one Overton window but several overlapping ones. There is an electoral window, a media window, a platform window, a corporate window, an academic window and a legal window. They no longer move together. A claim may be popular with voters but unacceptable in a workplace. A slogan may be orthodox in a university but alienating in a swing constituency. A speaker may be banned on one platform, celebrated on another and treated as a martyr by supporters precisely because of the ban. Legitimacy has become fragmented.
This fragmentation explains why censorship and free speech have become central political issues. The most important battles are no longer only about whether the state criminalises speech. They are about access to distribution, payment, employment, reputational safety and institutional recognition. The modern penalty for being outside the window is often exclusion from the networks through which public life is conducted. To supporters, such exclusion is necessary boundary maintenance against hatred and misinformation. To opponents, it is a soft form of political control that allows institutions to suppress views they cannot defeat democratically.
The right’s achievement since 2015 has been to reopen parts of the window that had been closed by elite consensus. Its weakness is that reopening the window also lets genuinely ugly material back into public life. The left’s achievement has been to show how language, status and institutional access can reproduce power even without formal censorship. Its weakness is that this insight can become a justification for treating disagreement as danger. Each side sees its own expansion of the window as liberation and the other side’s expansion as contamination.
The Overton window therefore remains a useful concept, but only if updated. It is not merely a passive description of public opinion. It is the visible boundary of a legitimacy system. It is produced by institutions that measure public reaction, elite risk, electoral incentives, activist pressure, platform rules and reputational cost, then convert those signals into permission or penalty. What has changed is that those institutions no longer agree with one another. The public, the parties and the prestige institutions are sending different signals.
The politics of the next decade will be shaped by that conflict. The question is not simply whether the window moves left or right. It is who gets to move it, which institutions retain the authority to enforce it, and whether democratic legitimacy or institutional legitimacy has the final word. The old settlement relied on the assumption that respectable opinion, expert authority and electoral politics would remain broadly aligned. That assumption has failed. The window has reopened, but not into a larger shared space. It has opened into a struggle over who controls the terms of public reality.