Maher often eschews political labels, referring to himself as "practical"; however, he has generally held moderately liberal views over the years. Maher stands against
political correctness. In his words, "The difference is that liberals protect people, and P.C. people protect feelings." In the past, he has also described himself as a
libertarian, and has also referred to himself "as a
progressive, as a sane person". Maher discussed his libertarian streak with
Rainn Wilson on an episode of the
Club Random podcast, saying "There are parts of me that are libertarian, yes, I always was for smoking pot, and leaving, you know,
our private lives whatever way we want as long as it doesn't hurt anybody else" and "I can't ever believe why it's so hard in this country to achieve 'liberal-but-not-stupid-woke,' 'fiscally-sane-but-not-cruel.' Is that really that fucking impossible?" In a 2012 panel discussion with
Salman Rushdie, Maher counted himself, Rushdie, and others such as
Christopher Hitchens and
Sam Harris as "9/11 liberals", noting that they differentiate themselves from many mainstream liberals in saying that not all religions are alike and that they are not bigoted in criticizing a particular religion. Maher favors the ending of
corporate welfare and federal funding of
non-profits; he also favors the legalization of gambling, prostitution, and cannabis. Maher also supports the death penalty. Maher describes himself as an environmentalist, and he has spoken in favor of the
Kyoto treaty on
global warming on his show
Real Time. He often criticizes industry figures involved in environmental pollution. He is a board member of
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. After
NPR CEO
Katherine Maher defended NPR's journalism as "completely unbiased" at a
congressional hearing in March 2025, Bill Maher characterized the radio network as "crazy
far-left" and called for defunding
public media outlets, arguing that the country is "past the age" of subsidizing them. (
D-Virginia)
Candidates and endorsements Maher considers himself to be at odds with both the
Republican Party and the
Democratic Party. Although Maher welcomed Obama's electoral victory, he soon became critical of the new president for not acting more boldly on health care reform and other liberal issues. On February 23, 2012, after his "Crazy Stupid Politics" special streamed on Yahoo! Screen, Maher announced that he was contributing $1 million to
Priorities USA, the Obama SuperPAC. Maher has voted for
Bob Dole and
Ralph Nader. In the lead-up to the
2014 midterm elections, Maher conducted a "Flip a District" contest on his HBO show. His audience was asked to select one "terrible, entrenched" member of Congress in a close election race—"the loserest loser of all"—to remove from office. Maher aimed to help oust that representative by shining a "national spotlight" on the politician during segments of his show and stand-up comedy appearances in that member's district during the Fall election. Maher ultimately selected
Republican Representative
John Kline from Minnesota's
2nd congressional district, but he failed to prevent him from winning against his
Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party opponent
Mike Obermueller. In the
2016 U.S. presidential election, Maher initially endorsed Senator
Bernie Sanders on February 5, 2016. Maher later announced his support for
Hillary Clinton after Clinton won the nomination from the
Democratic Party primary elections in June 2016. In October 2016, Maher criticized
WikiLeaks founder
Julian Assange for publishing
leaks from the DNC's emails, saying: "I really feel like he's lost his way a little, and he hates Hillary." On March 31, 2017, following her defeat, Maher responded on air to suggestions Clinton was ready to end her low profile and speak out: "Hillary, stay in the woods. Okay. You had your shot. You fucked it up. You're
Bill Buckner. We had the
World Series, and you let the grounder go through your legs. Let someone else have the chance." In August 2019, Maher said an
economic recession would be "worth it" if
Donald Trump did not get re-elected in 2020. He said: "We have survived many recessions. We can't survive another Donald Trump term." Over the course of 20 different editions of
Real Time with Bill Maher broadcast between April 13, 2018, and August 7, 2020, and in several press interviews, Maher predicted that Trump would refuse to concede any loss in the
2020 United States presidential election, dedicating a 'New Rules' end segment to the subject on January 25, 2020. Maher highlighted Trump's own public references to Maher's assertions that Trump was "not going to leave", and quoted Trump's March 14, 2019, assertion, "I have the support of the police, the military, the
bikers [for Trump]" and "the tough people", citing this as evidence that Trump would seek to remain in office by force. Maher predicted there would be violence by armed Trump supporters attempting to keep Trump in power and criticized Democratic Party politicians for not taking the threat seriously:"So my question to all
Democratic candidates is: what's the plan? If you win, and the next day he claims he's voiding the election because of irregularities he's hearing about, what do you do? What do you do when the
crowd that was in Virginia this week, 22,000 strong, marches on Washington? This is a scary moment. And when I've asked Democrats, 'What do we do if he doesn't go?', their answer is always some variation of 'We have to win big!'... First of all, NO! No, we don't have to win by a landslide! Jesus, fucking Democrats! I am so sick of Democrats volunteering to play by two different sets of rules. That's the new paradigm? Republicans can win by one vote, but we're not legitimate unless it's a landslide? Fuck. And two, do you really think it would matter if it was? That they would suddenly get rational about math and facts? They believe Hillary
ran a pedophile ring out of a pizza parlor!"Maher later said in an August 15, 2020, interview with
Vanity Fair that "we've baked it into the cake that he's not going to leave." In the September 25, 2020, edition of
Real Time, Maher criticized the framing of a
New York Times story by
Michael Crowley headlined "Trump Won't Commit to Peaceful Transfer of Power", which ran on page 15 of the print edition of the paper. Maher asserted, "I got no help from the
New York Times,
Washington Post, [or]
CNN", adding that the media "should have amplified" the severity of Trump's threats that he would refuse to concede or commit to a
peaceful transition of power. In January 2022, Maher declined to run in the
2024 United States presidential election following speculation by
Dana Perino that he might be called on to do so. In July 2024, he called on
Joe Biden to decline the Democratic party's nomination in order to have an
open convention at the
Democratic Convention; Maher expressed his support for
Gavin Newsom to replace Biden as the party's nominee. In February 2025, Maher endorsed Pennsylvania Senator
John Fetterman for the
2028 Democratic Party presidential primaries and praised his strong support of
Israel and stance against "
woke".
National security On June 7, 2013, Maher expressed on his show limited support for the
NSA's PRISM intelligence data collection from private phone calls and the Internet, saying that the threat of terrorists obtaining and using nuclear weapons was the tipping point for him. While he stated that he trusted the Obama administration to employ the program responsibly, he described the NSA's access to private data as a "slippery slope", and worried about whether other politicians would be as responsible. Since the
9/11 attacks, he has endorsed certain uses of profiling at airports, saying, "Places like Israel, where they have faced terrorism for a long time, of course understand that profiling is part of all detective work. It's part of all police work. If they stop calling it profiling and start calling it high-intelligence screening or something, people would go, it's about time." Maher opposed Trump's
Executive Order 13769, which banned entry into the US of citizens from five majority-Muslim countries, and has hosted multiple guests, including
Sam Harris and
Jim Jefferies, on his show who have also opposed the order. In 2022, Maher criticized the Biden administration's
Disinformation Governance Board and agreed with the comparison that the board was similar to the
Ministry of Truth from
George Orwell's dystopian novel
Nineteen Eighty-Four.
Foreign policy Maher favors having a strong military, but has said he is disenchanted with the size of the
American military and
defense spending. In 2015, Maher criticized
Barack Obama's visit to Saudi Arabia, a close
U.S. ally, saying: "Stop respecting their medieval bullshit under the guise of, 'It's their culture. Maher opposed the
Iraq War from the beginning and has summarized his opinion by saying that the United States and the world have had to pay too high a price for the war. On the
Israeli–Palestinian conflict, Maher says he is "more
on the side of the Israelis" and does not consider both sides equally guilty. He acknowledges that "Palestinians do have gripes", and he has been critical of
U.S. financial aid to Israel, saying "they don't need our money, they can handle it themselves." Maher says that most Israelis prefer a
two-state solution and oppose the hard-line stance of their government, which he describes as having been taken over by their version of the
Tea Party. However, Maher has defended Israel's military actions against Palestinians amid criticism over civilian deaths and disproportionate casualty count between Israelis and Palestinians during the
2014 Gaza war. He argues that Israel is still showing restraint, and he finds it ironic that the same people who were incredulous over how the Jews in World War II were led "to their slaughter" cannot understand why they are defending themselves now. Maher faced online backlash for tweeting at the start of the war, "Dealing w/ Hamas is like dealing w/ a crazy woman who's trying to kill u - u can only hold her wrists so long before you have to slap her". In August 2019, Maher denounced the
Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement, saying: "It's predicated on this notion ... I think it's very shallow thinking that the Jews in Israel are mostly white and Palestinians are mostly brown, so they must be innocent and correct and the Jews must be wrong." He responded to Rep.
Rashida Tlaib's call to boycott his talk show: "Some people have one move only: boycott.
Cancel. Make-go-away. But here's the thing,
the house voted 318 to 17 to condemn the #BDS movement, including 93% of Dems. Does Tlaib want to boycott 93% of her own party?" Condemning the
October 7 attacks, Maher spoke about it as Israel's
9/11, and took serious issue with people who seemed to applaud these attacks; however, he cautioned Israel not to "lose the moral high ground" in the
Gaza war. Maher expressed disappointment with former President
Barack Obama over his comments on the Gaza war, saying that "there is a big difference between collateral damage and what Hamas did." In April 2020, Maher criticized those who equated using the term "
Wuhan virus" with
racism, stating, "Scientists...have been naming diseases after the places they came from for a very long time.
Zika is from the
Zika Forest,
Ebola from the
Ebola River,
hantavirus the
Hantan River. There's the
West Nile virus and
Guinea worm and
Rocky Mountain spotted fever and, of course, the
Spanish flu." He added: "This has nothing to do with Asian Americans, and it has everything to do with China." In March 2021, Maher criticized China's
treatment of Uyghur minority in Xinjiang. However, he also said the
United States has "lost" to China in the "
battle for the 21st century". He said that
China is dominating the world while the U.S. is wasting time in a "never-ending
woke competition". He also compared China's "40,000 kilometers of
high-speed rail" to his own country, which had none. In September 2025, Maher criticized the lack of news coverage on the
persecution of Christians in Nigeria, stating that they are being "systematically killed". He rhetorically questioned: "Where are the kids protesting this?"
Race In June 2017, Maher came under criticism for saying in an off-the-cuff joke "I'm a
house nigger" in response to guest Senator
Ben Sasse offering Maher to work on the fields in his home state on
Real Time. This led to calls being made by people to HBO to fire him. Following the episode, HBO sent a statement to media outlets, calling Maher's remarks "inexcusable and tasteless", and said the cable network would remove that segment from future airings of the show. Maher also issued a statement apologizing for the remarks, saying in part, "I regret the word I used in the banter of a live moment. The word was offensive, and I regret saying it and am very sorry." In 2021, Maher opposed the NFL's decision to play the "
Black national anthem" before games, considering it a form of segregation. Instead, he argued for one national anthem and rejected separate ceremonies and dorms based on race, which drew some criticism. In 2022, Maher criticized the Democratic Party for "checking boxes" in regard to candidates of different identity groups, including race. He stated that Democrats prioritize diversity over merit. Maher has also spoken out against
critical race theory but supports teaching the
history of racism.
Immigration In November 2015, Maher expressed opposition to the United States accepting
Syrian refugees. Maher argued that they have different values which are at odds with American values due to some refugees may be coming from places which are governed by
Sharia law or want to be. Maher cited cases in the UK where Muslim immigrants had carried out
female genital mutilation and
honor killings. In 2021, after the
withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan, Maher urged America to take in
Afghan refugees. Maher has criticized Donald Trump's opposition to immigration, including his proposed
border wall, and accused him of hypocrisy, having himself married two immigrants. Maher has also accused Republicans of hypocrisy for opposing immigration and praising their immigrant parents, saying "You can't spend the first half of a debate bitching about how immigrants are ruining the country and the second half on the uplifting stories of your immigrant parents." Maher has criticized Democrats' approach to immigration and has praised Canada's system, saying "Canada is much more to the right on immigration. You have to have a skill. That's mostly what it's based on. Ours is mostly based on family."
Gun rights and hunting rights Maher endorsed
a 2014 Maine referendum to ban the use of bait, traps and dogs to
hunt bears in Maine. He specifically criticized the use of bait, referring to its use as "nothing but an execution". Maher is a gun owner, and explained in his February 12, 2013, appearance on the late-night TV talk show
Conan that he owns guns for personal home protection. However, he does not identify himself as a "proud" gun owner, commenting that being a proud gun owner is akin to "saying I'm a 'proud remote control owner. Maher has stated that statistics showing that gun owners are more likely to harm a member of their household are caused by irresponsible gun owners, and believes that tragedies such as
school shootings will not lead to a fundamental change in gun laws because both
Democrats and
Republicans favor guns. Maher has also questioned the need to own large arsenals of guns. He believes the
Second Amendment is "
bullshit" and said that bipartisan background check legislation proposed by
Pat Toomey and
Joe Manchin was "so marginal". In 2022, Maher blamed mass shooting in part due to Hollywood romanticization of gun violence in movies. However, Maher has said that despite him not liking guns he is glad that they exist, saying it "levels the playing field". ==Views==