On a 2017 episode of the
Sam Harris podcast
Making Sense, Loury stated that while he used to be "a Reagan conservative", he now thought of himself as a "centrist Democrat, or maybe a mildly right-of-center Democrat".
The New York Times has described Loury as "conservative-leaning" and
The Wall Street Journal as a "Reagan Republican". On January 9, 2007, Loury had spoken out against increasing the number of U.S. troops in
Iraq.
Presidential elections and candidates Loury was critical of
Barack Obama 2008 presidential campaign. He continued to criticize
Obama as president calling his tenure "depressing in the extreme" and also criticized Obama's closeness to
Al Sharpton. In 2016, he supported
Hillary Clinton. After the
2016 U.S. presidential election, Loury warned it was dangerous for people not to recognize
Donald Trump as the 45th President. During debates with
John McWhorter, Loury defended
Donald Trump. During Trump's presidency he doubted claims that Trump was an existential threat to the public. After Trump refused to concede that he lost the
2020 U.S. presidential election, he rebuked him. Loury would later blame Trump for the
2021 U.S. Capitol attack but opposed
Trump's second impeachment.
Race Loury opposes
reparations for slavery and
affirmative action. He has said that "affirmative action is not the solution, but neither is it the problem". Conversely, he has criticized affirmative action saying, "Affirmative action is dishonest. It’s not about equality, it’s about covering ass." In 1984, Loury drew the attention of critics with "A New American Dilemma", published in
The New Republic, a piece in which he addressed what he termed "fundamental failures in black society" such as "the lagging academic performance of black students, the disturbingly high rate of black-on-black crime, and the alarming increase in early unwed pregnancies among blacks". In June 2020, Loury published a rebuttal to a letter that Brown University president
Christina Paxson sent to students and alumni in response to the
murder of George Floyd by a policeman. Loury questioned the purpose of Paxson's letter, saying it either "affirmed platitudes to which we can all subscribe, or, more menacingly, it asserted controversial and arguable positions as though they were axiomatic certainties."
Immigration On immigration, Loury said in an interview segment in
The First Measured Century, "There are benefits of immigration, and there are also costs. The benefits in terms of cheaper, eager labor to help we Americans produce the products that we want to consume. The costs are in terms of making it more difficult to equalize the economic circumstances of some Americans who are at the bottom of the heap, because they now have more competition for their labor, as a result of immigration." ==Awards and honors==