Definition of "illiberal"
illiberal
adjective
comparative more illiberal, superlative most illiberal
Restricting or failing to sufficiently promote individual choice and freedom.
Quotations
Behind Europe's commitment to liberal democracy lurks an illiberal tradition. Every time freedom has failed in Europe, it is to that tradition - of violent repression, totalitarianism, xenophobia, and intolerance - that Europeans have reverted.
2004 December 15, Emanuele Ottolenghi, “Illiberal Europe”, in The Jerusalem Post
Quotations
(archaic) Ungenerous, stingy.
Quotations
...the final offer made on the part of the King was that the Queen should have an allowance of 52,000 pounds a year— not, one would have thought, a very illiberal allowance for the daughter of a small German prince...
1901, Justin McCarthy, Justin Huntly McCarthy, A History of the Four Georges and of William IV, volume IV
The few who are more fortunate are rendered illiberal by their unjust privileges, and oppressive through fear of the awakening indignation of the masses. From the highest to the lowest, almost all men are absorbed in the economic struggle: the struggle to acquire what is their due or to retain what is not their due.
1917, Bertrand Russell, “Chapter II: Capitalism and the Wage System”, in Political Ideals
(economics, politics) Not adhering to either liberalism or neoliberalism.
Quotations
In the general atmosphere of lawlessness and arbitrariness the final outcome may be less harsh and unpleasant than might at first have been expected — though it can be a lot worse if you are an Albanian "irredentist", for example, or a Croatian "separatist", or if you happen to be undergoing trial and sentence in an illiberal republic like Bosnia or Hercegovina.
1986, Encounter, volume 66, page 58
noun
plural illiberals
One opposed to liberal principles.
Quotations