Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
This politician nails entrepreneurship and the importance of work
This politician nails entrepreneurship and the importance of work
Dec 9, 2025 10:59 AM

The news highlights from Theresa May’s speech this morning at the Conservative Party’s 2018 conference may be that she branded Labour the “Jeremy Corbyn Party” mitting her party to “ending austerity,” increasing spending on the NHS (which, she said, “embodies our principles as Conservatives more profoundly” than any other institution), and suspending the national gasoline tax for the ninth year – a move that saved British taxpayers £9 billion a year. But there’s a section noteworthy for its rarity in public discourse: a well-versed description of the social value of business, entrepreneurship, and the rewards of work.

Her ium to es as she and her fellow Tories have been attacked as “anti-business” for their willingness to leave the EU with no deal, if need be. Her words show she deeply values the importance of taking – or creating – a career.

“Offering someone a job – creating opportunity for other people – is one of the most socially-responsible things you can do,” May said this morning. “It is an act of public service as noble as any other.”

She recounted a conversation she had with a young woman during her recent visit to South Africa:

She told me her ambition was to start a business, so she could create jobs in her munity.

The people in this hall who have started their own businesses will know how thrilling it is to take a risk and start something new.

But offering someone a job – creating opportunity for other people – is one of the most socially-responsible things you can do. It is an act of public service as noble as any other.

To everyone who has done it – we are all in your debt. So, we in this party, we in this hall, we say thank you.

In a section bat the party’s newfound anti-corporate image (in which the vicar’s daughter made a double entendre alluding to a curse word), May promised to “back business”:

Back them to create jobs and build prosperity.

Back them to drive innovation and improve lives.

Back them with the lowest Corporation Tax in the G20.

Britain, under my Conservative government, is open for business.

We support free markets because we know their strengths.

But we also know their limits.

The defining event for a new generation of voters was not the fall of the Berlin Wall, but the collapse of the banks.

She then connected rising employment, brought about by a moderately more favorable business climate, to human flourishing, even the importance of having a child grow up in a house in which someone works:

Eight years on, how have we done?

Our economy is growing.

The deficit down by four-fifths.

Unemployment at its lowest since the 1970s.

Youth unemployment at a record low.

Households where nobody works down by almost a million.

We should not forget what’s behind those numbers.

The parent who swaps a benefit check for a regular wage.

The youngster leaving school and never having to sign on.

The children growing up with an example of hard work.

Hope and dignity for millions of people in our country.

In a year full of missteps, a tenure that sometimes has earned its reputation for meddling in free enterprise, and a speech containing other concerning elements, this long section dedicated to the importance of work and entrepreneurial action is e. This understanding is all-too rare among politicians – and pastor’s children – of any background.

Use / Shutterstock.)

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 Interior Freedom To Embrace What Is Coherent, Good, True, Beautiful
Archbishop William E. Lori of Baltimore is one of the Chairmen of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops Committee for Religious Liberty. He recently celebrated what is known as a “Red Mass”, an annual event throughout the church for lawyers, judges, legislators and others in the legal profession, at St. Benedict Catholic Church in Richmond, Va. In his homily, he addressed issues of religious liberty pertinent to Americans today. First, he stressed the link between sound society and morality:...
Eurozone Unemployment At Record Levels
“Abysmal.” That’s the word one reporter is using to describe the newly released numbers for Eurozone unemployment and inflation. The Eurozone (which includes 17 nations) is seeing miserable numbers: The ranks of the jobless swelled by 60,000 to a record 19.45 million, according to Eurostat, the European Union’s statistics agency. Though the unemployment rate remained steady at 12.2 percent, the previous month was revised up from 12 percent. Youth unemployment, which has been particularly high, rose .1 percent as well....
Reformation and the Need for Truth
Martin Luther “did more than any single man to make modern history the development of revolution,” declared Lord Acton. (Lectures on Modern History) The Protestant Reformation profoundly changed the trajectory of Western Civilization. While the Reformation changed every facet of society, it is important to remember that the Protestant Reformers were of course, primarily theologians. In their view, they believed they were recovering truth about God’s Word and revelation to the world. Today is Reformation Day and many Protestants around...
Diversity Is The Basis of Society
In a recent review ofChristena Cleveland’sDisunity in Christ:Uncovering the Hidden Forces that Keep Us Apart,Paul Louis Metzger wonders, “What leads people to associate with those who are similar, while distancing themselves from diverse others? What causes us to categorize other groups in distorted ways?” I remember reading H. Richard Niebuhr’sThe Social Sources of Denominationalism early in my seminary career, and Niebuhr’s analysis made a very strong impression on my admittedly impressionable sensibilities. It was clear to me then, and still...
The Good News About Global Poverty
Have you heard the good news about global poverty? The number of people living in abject poverty — defined as living on less than $1.25 per day — has been halved since 1990. Steve Davies of LearnLiberty explains how that happened and how in the near future we may be able to eradicate extreme poverty. ...
Gaia’s Vengeance: The Caustic Cliché of Environmentalism
In this week’s Acton Commentary, Ryan H. Murphy asks, “Why don’t we bat an eye when extremists hope a pagan god will smite SUV owners?” TV Tropes, a Wikipedia-style website, catalogs many clichés of fiction, including this, which the site calls “Gaia’s Vengeance.” Some variation on this theme can be found in major Hollywood movies like The Happening, The Day After Tomorrow, and Avatar. To take a specific example, Kid Icarus: Uprising, a 2012 Nintendo 3DS video game that has...
The Real Lesson of Prohibition
In 1919 Congress passed the Volstead Act enforcing the Eighteenth Amendment, prohibiting, for almost all purposes, the production, sale, and distribution of alcoholic beverages. There are two erroneous things everybody has learned from Prohibition, says Anthony Esolen: “First, it is wrong to try to legislate morality. Second, you cannot do it, for Prohibition failed.” The real lessons of Prohibition, though, go unheeded: That amendment inserted into the Constitution a law that neither protected fundamental rights nor adjusted the mechanics of...
Poet Christian Wiman: Getting Glimpses Of God
Former editor of Poetry magazine Christian Wiman struggles, like many of us, to make sense of suffering and faith. His struggle is poetic: God goes belonging to every riven thing. He’s made the things that bring him near, made the mind that makes him go. A part of what man knows, apart from what man knows, God goes belonging to every riven thing he’s made. In the following interview with Religion & Ethics Newsweekly, Wiman discusses his faith journey, his...
There is Still No Tea Party Movement
There was something wrong with Zhang’s dog. The Chinese man had bought the Pomeranian on a business trip, but after he brought it home he found the animal to be wild and difficult to train. The dog would bite his master, make strange noises, and had a tail that mysteriously continued to grow. And the smell. Even after giving the mutt a daily bath Zhang couldn’t bear the strong stink. When he could take it no longer, Zhang sought help...
Religious Activists Petition SEC for Greater Corporate ‘Disclosure’
“Byrdes of on kynde and color flok and flye allwayes together,” wrote William Turner in 1545. If he were with us today, the author might construct an interesting Venn diagram representing the activist birds scheduled to testify tomorrow before the Securities and Exchange Commission. But, rather than briefly overlapping sets of circles, the SEC witnesses for greater corporate prise one giant bubble of activists seeking to circumvent the U.S. Supreme Court Citizens United ruling, including Laura Berry, executive director, the...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved