Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Post-Brexit, Daniel Hannan champions the moral case for free trade
Post-Brexit, Daniel Hannan champions the moral case for free trade
Nov 28, 2025 8:28 PM

In the immediate aftermath of the vote forBrexit, conservatives were quick to cheer Britain’s decision, hailing it as a win for freedom, democracy, and subsidiarity. Others, however, were just as eager to claim it was a move driven by fear and protectionism.

Standing in the midst was Daniel Hannan, the British Conservative MEP, who insisted that the causes of national sovereignty and free exchange needn’t conflict. “Being a nation means that we are not just a random set of individuals born to a different random set of random individuals,” he proclaimed in a rousing speech prior to the Brexit vote. “It imposes on us a duty to keep intact the freedoms that we were lucky enough to inherit from our parents and pass them on securely to the next generation.”

Now, over a year into the transition, Hannan continues to champion that view, particularly as it relates to the contentious topic of trade. Having founded a new think tank, the Institute for Free Trade, he seeks to connect the dots between national stability and open exchange, making “the intellectual and moral case for free trade” and using “Britain’s withdrawal from the European Union as a unique opportunity to revitalise the world trading system.”

“We need to recapture the moral case for merce,” IFT’swebsite explains. “Free trade is not simply a way to buy cheaper iPhones. It is the ultimate instrument of poverty alleviation, conflict resolution and social justice.”

The institute recently launched in London, corresponding with the bicentenary of David Ricardo’s idea parative advantage, which Hannan describes as “a mind-blowing exercise in logic that demonstrates why free trade is always in the interests of the countries that practice it, however unproductive they pared to mercial partners.”

Led by economic thinkers such as Deirdre McCloskey, Mark Perry, and Matt Ridley, as well as political figures such as Jorge Quiroga (former President of Bolivia) and Alexander Downer (Australian High Commissioner and former foreign minister), the event provided prehensive vision for the importance of what Hannan calls “our global vocation.” Perry offers a good recap here.

True to form, Hannan’s own reflectionsbuck the rhetorical trends and typical wedges we’re accustomed to, pointing instead to the deeper moral framework and, again, elevating the importance of a shared national vision amid our global giving and receiving.

Not content to unite the conservative factions, Hannan prods the progressives as well, noting the profound disconnect between the modern placent protectionism and Ricardo’s more radical, classical liberalism.

How astonished [Ricardo] would be, if he could be transported to our own age, to see that progressives have now turned against free trade, once the ultimate progressive crusade. How bizarre he would find the sight of idealistic young Leftists marching against G20 meetings, protesting trade deals, occupying stock exchanges, thinking that they are somehow standing up for the poor against big multinationals. As Ricardo well understood, no one gains more from distortions of trade than powerful lobby groups, and no one gains more from their dismantling than the most vulnerable people on the planet.

In Ricardo’s day, protectionism was seen for what it was: a way to transfer wealth from the poor to the rich. Today, we have an extra 200 years of evidence proving that point. Would you rather be poor in North Korea or South Korea? And yet, against all apparent reason, free trade continues to be howled down as something exploitative…Free trade is what lifted us above the run of nations and, in the process, lifted others. It is one of those delightful things – along with smiles and kisses – that enriches both parties. It is time we recovered our global vocation.

As the Brexit transition continues, and as other nations continue to wrestle with the same challenges of national cohesion in a globalized world, Hannan’s efforts points us to the tension we ought to pursue.

Basic sovereignty and local control needn’t be seen only as goods unto themselves. When paired with a healthy view of the global economy and the value of human exchange, they are but the first steps on the path to a renewal of freedom and virtue — social, economic, political, and otherwise.

Watch: Daniel Hannan’s speech at theActon Institute 24th Anniversary Dinner.

Image: Gage Skidmore(CC BY-SA 2.0)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
The Church must confront China over Hong Kong
China’s worsening human rights abuses instigated an historic change in U.S. foreign policy. Unfortunately, they have drawn a sharper rebuke from secular politicians than from many in the church. On May 27, U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced that the Trump administration stands ready to revoke Hong Kong’s privileged relationship with the U.S., because the province is no longer sufficiently independent of the People’s Republic of China. When the UK relinquished Hong Kong in 1997, Beijing promised to respect...
Finding civil society as Minneapolis burns
On May 25, George Floyd was murdered on the streets of Minneapolis, killed by “asphyxiation from sustained pressure” after his neck was pressed for over eight minutes under the knee of a police officer—a supposed public servant who was sworn to “serve and protect.” It’s a tragic example of the moral and institutional rot that pervades society, particularly as it relates to the enduring threats of racism, white supremacy, and over-criminalization among minorities and the poor. As if this injustice...
Black looting victim: Our business ‘is our ministry’
The nation has reached a baffling moment in our history: looting and torching minority-owned businesses for racial equality. The weeklong pandemic of mob violence following the death of George Floyd has destroyed minority business owners’ dreams, denied young minorities jobs, and left neighborhoods depleted, depressed, and alone. While ideologues like 1619 Project leader Nikole Hannah-Jones dismiss concerns over “destroying property,” the looters’ victims make clear the damage goes well beyond bricks and mortar. “We’re here for God. This is our...
Kuyper, Pope Leo XIII and the social question today
I was a guest on the Working Man podcast this week, discussing the connections between the Dutch theologian and statesman Abraham Kuyper and Pope Leo XIII. In 1891 both Leo and Kuyper published important documents providing Christian reflection on the “social question.” On the 125th anniversary of those publications, the Acton Institute produced an edition of these landmark contributions to the foundations of modern Christian social thought. The Working Man podcast is a production of Harmel Academy of the Trades,...
“Minneapolice” state creates its own monster
In a May 30 article I published for the Italian media outlet Nouva Bussola Quotidiana, “Minneapolice”, repression and anger behind the violence, I explain that plenty of kindling was laid during American COVID-19 lockdowns for heated unrest that has erupted nationwide following George Floyd’s killing. As I write, “with drastic levels of poverty, hunger, and death, we should not be at all surprised” that desperate citizens that have now looted arsoned buildings to “personally consume” goods or “sell for a...
Coronavirus surges in Latin America
On Wednesday Alejandro Chafuen—the Acton Institute’s Managing Director, International—continued his series of articles on chronicling the impact of the coronavirus in Latin America. While the total number of cases has yet to reach the levels we see in the United States, the rate of infections and related deaths is increasing. While testing is ing more frequent and widespread, it still trails behind much of the rest of the world. As winter settles over the Southern Hemisphere, the answers to many...
Acton Line podcast: Anthony Bradley on George Floyd, police reform, and riots
The tragic and disturbing footage of George Floyd’s unjust death at the hands of Minneapolis police officers has been circulating for over a week.Floyd’s death on May 25 has sparked protests across the country and even the world, but it’s also sparked many violent riots in which people have been brutally killed munities decimated. How can we helpfully approach policing reform and how should we respond to the current widespread rioting? Anthony Bradley, professor of religion, theology and ethics at...
George Floyd reveals the bankruptcy of the elites
The protests, looting, and fires which have rocked the city of Minneapolis after the tragic death of George Floyd are yet another illustration of prehensive failure of our leading institutions, which seem petent and unprepared to handle society’s widespread anger and alienation. The concurrent rise of nationalism, socialism, and populism during the twentieth-first century increasingly resembles a tragic recapitulation of the nineteenth. Institutions are in crisis and elites face increasing criticism for the way their mismanagement has eroded mon good....
What turns protests into riots?
On Saturday night, the riots came to Grand Rapids, Michigan. Vandals looted and damaged 100 businesses and destroyed seven police cars. Officers are now seeking photos and videos to track down rioters. Businesses already struggling as a result of lockdowns are now grappling with damage and theft inflicted by rioters. The National Guard was mobilized, and the city issued a 7 p.m. curfew which expired at 5 o’clock this morning. Things have been relatively quiet since these measures took effect,...
What destroyed Detroit is now destroying America
When I first moved to Grand Rapids, Michigan, in 1986, the city was an alien place to me. I had grown up on the eastern side of the state, in the I-75 manufacturing corridor that runs from Toledo to Bay City. Soon, I came to realize that in Grand Rapids, I wasn’t just living in a different region of Michigan: I was living in a different state, a different culture. It was shocking to hear people in West Michigan crow...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved