"Neoliberal" does not mean "not fascist". Neoliberalism is a pretty useless term but "actually existing neoliberalism" is an authoritarian tendency of post-industrial states that's been developing for about forty years, in which a flexible repertoire of controlling law, policy and technology are parameterised by more and more measurement and surveillance.
Its got a ton of different moods or vibes because it's been developing for decades, but it's consistently antidemocratic: material changes to law and policy outpace opportunities for intervention at a vote and officials accrue more and more power.
Trump getting inaugurated and signing a whole slew of precooked, substantive executive orders that selectively affect borders, tariffs, federal agencies, international agreements, multilateral institutions and more, picking favourites and choosing which parts of society and state will be disciplined and pegged back, is very much "neoliberal" ... and it's also very much "identity politics", just those of the white right wing.
It's the regime of control, same as the last one just with a vibe shift. People in the UK should be starting to figure this out given Brexit hasn't done a damn thing for them.