Talk:Right-wing liberalism

Merging to Conservative liberalism
While I'm not opposed to expand this and make it a full article, only conservative liberalism is what I'd call right-wing liberalism. Classical liberalism, i.e. pre-19th–20th century liberalism, not 21st-century people who identify as classical liberals (indeed, I reject the classical and social liberalism dicthonomy, preferring classical and new liberalism, as social liberalism was originally called, like social liberalism doesn't also support most of classical liberals ideals anyway), weren't right-wing and national liberalism has included both centre-left and centre-right liberals. Finally, Conservative liberalism has the only source expliciting referring to it as "representing the right wing of the liberal movement". The source is Peter Mair; Michael Laver; Michael Gallagher (1985). Representative Government in Modern Europe. p. 221.--Davide King (talk) 06:21, 12 November 2019 (UTC)

I see you have thanked me for this; do you agree with my proposal?--Davide King (talk) 01:24, 14 November 2019 (UTC)