Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
What’s missing from the UK prime minister’s race? A British view
What’s missing from the UK prime minister’s race? A British view
Dec 6, 2025 4:26 AM

The 313 Conservative MPs held the second round of voting to elect the new leader of the Conservative Party and prime minister of the United Kingdom. Each of the six remaining candidates – Boris Johnson, Jeremy Hunt, Michael Gove, Dominic Raab, Sajid Javid, and Rory Stewart – had to receive at least 33 votes to advance to the next round. The results, which were announced around 6 p.m. London time, were as follows:

Johnson: 126;Hunt: 46;Gove: 41;Stewart: 37;Javid: 33; andRaab: 30.

The result eliminates Dominic Raab from the race. As many as two more votes by MPs will take place this week. When only two candidates remain, the full registered membership of the Conservative Party will vote for Tory leader.

However, as the race has heated up, analysts from the UK say some weighty issues have been missing. “One hoped – hoped I am afraid, in vain – that the candidates for the leadership of the Conservative Party might have set out a vision for economic freedom, fiscal responsibility, and a lesser role for the state,” writes Rev. Richard Turnbull in a new analysis posted today at the Acton Institute’s Religion & Liberty Transatlanticwebsite.

After the reviews the substantial promises made by the candidates standing to replace Theresa May, Rev. Turnbull – who is ordained in the Church of England and director of the Oxford-based Centre for Entreprise, Morality, and Ethics (CEME) – notes that politicians of every stripe seem to prioritize state intervention and dismiss the ability of British citizens to solve their own problems cooperatively through the free market. He writes:

I suppose no one, sadly, is going to be elected the leader of the Conservative and Unionist Party with the following set of principles:

The government’s share of GDP shall be greatly reduced;This will involve actively reducing the size and role of the state;No spending proposals will be made unless matched by a greater number of spending reductions;The regulatory regime of the country will be systematically reduced in volume and scope;There will be an assumption in all policy proposals that the answer lies in the private sector and with private enterprise, unless it can prehensively demonstrated that government intervention is needed;Parliament will sit for a maximum of 100 days in a year; andThere will be active delegation of responsibility to individuals, families, and munities through the principle known as subsidiarity.

… The saddest thing is that the candidates for the Conservative Party leadership seem so incapable of advocating fiscally conservative and responsible policies based on time-tested principles.

The last candidate to advocate such a program was Margaret Thatcher, he writes. “How far we e. And how utterly essential it is that we promote, advocate, and set forth a vision for economic freedom, liberty, and responsibility growing out of traditional Western ethics.”

You can read Rev. Turnbull’s full analysis here.

domain.)

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
“We must overcome fear”
In the Catholic Church, the Easter Vigil liturgy is usually the ceremony during which catechumens (non-Christians) and candidates (non-Catholic Christians) are respectively baptized and received into the Church. In Rome this Easter there was a particularly noteworthy baptism, presided over by Pope Benedict. Magdi Allam is an Italian journalist who converted from Islam to Christianity. Instead of taking mon route of doing so as inconspicuously as possible—an approach that is perfectly reasonable given the risks entailed by such a move—Allam...
Hoekstra: ‘Islam and Free Speech’
In today’s Wall Street Journal, Rep. Peter Hoekstra discusses the impending release of Fitna, a short film highly critical of Islam, by Geert Wilders, a member of the Dutch parliament. Hoekstra: Radical jihadists are prepared to use violence against individuals to stop them from exercising their free speech rights. In some countries, converting a Muslim to another faith is a crime punishable by death. While Muslim clerics are free to preach and proselytize in the West, some Muslim nations severely...
Anthony Bradley on headline news
Acton Research Fellow Anthony Bradley was featured on The Glenn Beck Program on Headline News Network to discuss black liberation theology with host Glenn Beck on Wednesday night. If you didn’t catch his appearance, you can watch it right here on the PowerBlog. And for more on the topic with Anthony Bradley and Rev. Robert A. Sirico, check out the most recent edition of Radio Free Acton – Obama and Religion, Part I. ...
Pollyanna Krugman
In mentary on Social Security yesterday, I referred to the latest trustees’ report as evidence of the continuing need for reform. Anyone who happened to see New York Times columnist Paul Krugman’s blog a day earlier might understandably wonder whether we were looking at the same report. Krugman highlights a modestly improving actuarial balance as justification to conclude, “Social Security’s financial problem is relatively minor. It doesn’t deserve the emphasis it receives from most pundits.” One of menters corroborates what...
Straight talk on poverty & the family
A call to end poverty through more spending by the federal government is forever professed by some candidates and politicians. Maybe, they say, if just more money was appropriated and distributed this time, the results and relief for those in financial need would be conclusively different? Former President Clinton at least ran for office as a “new Democrat,” went on to declare the end of the era of big government, and signed welfare reform. Clinton was the first Democrat to...
Medvedev and Madison
Russian emigre philosopher Georgy Fedotov (1888-1951) proposed two basic principles for all of the freedoms by which modern democracy lives. First, and most valuable, there are the freedoms of “conviction” — in speech, in print, and in organized social activity. These freedoms, Fedotov asserted, developed out of the freedom of faith. The other principle of freedom “defends the individual from the arbitrary will of the state (which is independent of questions of conscience and thought) — freedom from arbitrary arrest...
Truth and consequences
Tonight FOX’s new hit gameshow “Moment of Truth” will air its latest installment. For those not familiar with the show’s premise, the contestant submits to a lie detector test before the show is taped. A series of questions are asked which form the basis for the pool of questions that will be asked again during the taping. If the answers given during the taping match the results of the previous interview, the contestant stands to win a great deal of...
We Need a Menaissance
This bit in this week’s Telegraph nails something I’ve been wrangling with for a while. Maybe you men out there can relate: Many men believe the world is now dominated by women and that they have lost their role in society, fuelling feelings of depression and being undervalued. Research shows the extent to which men have had to change within one or two generations, adapting to new rules and different expectations. Asked what it meant to be a man in...
Should water have a price?
In a front-page article of the March 20-21 edition of the Vatican’s newspaper, L’Osservatore Romano, entitled “L’aqua une per tutti” (“Water: Common Good for All”), an Italian political scientist laments that a basic necessity of life is bought and sold. Riccardo Petrella of the Catholic University of Louvain in Belgium is rightly concerned that a billion people do not have access to clean drinking water. While he criticizes world leaders for not making this problem a top priority, his main...
Global Warming Consensus alert: I hope your earth hour party was as crazy as mine!
It’s been a while since we’ve seen pletely meaningless gesture on behalf of the unsinkable global warming consensus. As such, it’s my pleasure to announce that the next meaningless gesture will occur… last Saturday? Oops. Yes, Saturday evening saw the arrival of Earth Hour, an 8-9 pm extravaganza of switching off lights that apparently not many people knew about. For example, here’s the local reaction from the Grand Rapids Press: …some of Grand Rapids’ most prominent environmentalists, including Mayor George...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved