logo
Why conservatives should embrace their Christian heritage

Why conservatives should embrace their Christian heritage

Spectator2 days ago

The heydays of Christian influence over European politics may seem long gone. In the UK, after the most recent general election, four-tenths of all MPs took secular affirmations – up from less than a quarter in 2019 – while in Europe, parties with explicitly Christian foundations often seem embarrassed about their religious heritage as they tumble down the polls. Yet Christians have not stopped turning up for those parties. To play to its strengths and resolve its identity crisis, the centre-right should embrace its Christian inheritance.
By returning to this Christian inheritance, the centre-right can offer a vision that is compelling to all and re-establish its dominance
Even as the centre-right shies away from invoking its Christian credentials, it continues to rally Christian voters around its banner. In the UK, according to the most recent wave of the British Election Study, Christian voters were 33 per cent more likely to vote Conservative, compared to only 15 per cent of non-Christians. In Germany, too, churchgoing Christians are more than twice as likely to vote for the CDU/CSU Union than the non-religious. Even in the notoriously secular France, Catholics disproportionately turn up for the centre-right, with 19 per cent of Catholics – and 29 per cent of regular churchgoers – voting for the centre-right UDC at the 2022 legislative election, where the UDC received only 14 per cent of the overall vote.
This reflects a long-standing trend. A recent report by Bright Blue and the Konrad Adenauer Foundation argued that religiosity has been a core component of European centre-right's history as they dominated European politics over the course of the twentieth century. Since 1949, the CDU held the chancellorship for 49 years – 26 more than its main rival, the SPD – during which time its policy platform was largely dictated by Catholic social thought, emphasising the value of family and the importance of social cohesion.
In Ireland, up until recent years, both Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael upheld a staunchly Catholic outlook on social policy as they maintained a stranglehold over Irish politics; their Catholicism waned only as their combined vote share began to tumble, but this abandonment of their roots has proven a poor recipe for electoral success. Even in the UK, where Christianity was not as explicit a part of Conservative Party philosophy, the Church of England is not described as 'the Conservative Party at prayer' without reason.
This is not merely because Christians vote right-wing. A 2023 paper titled From the Death of God to the Rise of Hitler found that a key predictor for whether you joined the Nazi Party or not was whether you had a Christian first name. If your name was common on churches – think St George or St Martin in England – you were far less likely to do so. The values of the centre-right deeply reflect their Christian heritage, while far-right politics instead often offers a secularised version of religion; one where politics, rather than God, is the source of meaning, and the party takes on the role of the church.
For the centre-right to succeed in the future, it should play to its strengths and embrace its Christian inheritance. First, by doing so, it would be playing into a renewed uptick in church attendance and religiosity. Between 2018 and 2024, church attendance in the UK has increased by 50 per cent, including by 300 per cent among the 18-to-24s. In France, as of 2025, the annual number of baptisms is the highest since records began 20 years ago.
But second, and more importantly, the values that have allowed the centre-right to be successful are the values it inherits from Christianity: love of country, caring for your family and rewarding contribution.
The late Pope Saint John Paul II, in Memory and Identity – the very last book he published before his death – wrote that 'patriotism … is covered by the fourth commandment, which obliges us to honour our father and mother…the patria truly resembles a mother…Patriotism, in other words, leads to a properly ordered social love.'
The centre-right alone can provide a vision of country that represents a love of your closest neighbour rather than shutting off from the world, as some right-wing populists would prefer.
On rewarding contribution, too, it is largely thanks to its Christian heritage that the centre-right believes that people should take responsibility for their actions – that we have free will and are accountable for our actions and should be rewarded or punished accordingly. Here, it has clashed with those on the left who see hard work or good character as the mere consequences of socio-economic factors and nothing that anybody deserves praise or blame for.
Those beliefs – in country, family and contribution – are persuasive to all Europeans, not just Christians. By returning to this Christian inheritance, the centre-right can offer a vision that is compelling to all and re-establish its former dominance.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Tory councillor recorded saying 'white men should have black slaves' is banned from public office
Tory councillor recorded saying 'white men should have black slaves' is banned from public office

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Tory councillor recorded saying 'white men should have black slaves' is banned from public office

A Conservative councillor who was recorded saying 'all white men should have a black slave' because they are 'lower class' has been banned from public office. Andrew Edwards, of Pembrokeshire in Wales, made the comments in a 16-second WhatsApp voice clip to his then partner. When reports of the audio note emerged in 2023, Mr Edwards claimed it may have been a ' deepfake ' hoax. But a case tribunal has found the former councillor for the Haverfordwest Prendergast ward did indeed send the voice note, and he has now been banned from acting as a councillor for four years. Mr Edwards had said in the audio clip: 'Nothing wrong with the skin colour at all. 'I think all white men should have a black man as a slave, or black woman as a slave, you know. There's nothing wrong with skin colour, it's just that they're lower class than us white people, you know.' Mr Edwards released a statement at the time which read: 'I am aware of such serious allegations being made against me. This is why I have self-referred to the public services ombudsman for an independent evaluation. 'It is now in the hands of legal experts and the ombudsman. It would be unfair on the process for me to comment now.' The clip had been forwarded on anonymously to Rhian Young, the monitoring officer at Pembrokeshire county council, who recognised the voice as that of Mr Edwards. Mr Edwards was suspended by the Conservative Party after recording surfaced but continued in office as an independent - though he later resigned. In a statement issued at the time, he said: 'Family matters have made my position as a county councillor untenable. I have therefore decided to resign from the council, as I feel unable to carry out my duties to the standard I would wish at this time. This has not been an easy decision, but I believe it is in the best interests of those I represent.' A case tribunal has now been held by the Adjudication Panel for Wales, which found Mr Edwards did send the voice note and had breached the authority's code of conduct. A notice of decision published by the panel read: 'The Adjudication Panel for Wales (the tribunal) received a referral from the Public Services Ombudsman for Wales in relation to allegations made against former councillor Edwards. 'The allegations were that he had breached the authority's code of conduct by firstly, recording a racist voice note that he sent to his then partner via the WhatsApp messaging application and secondly, that he shared information relating to council business alongside disrespectful comments about members of the public to his then partner via WhatsApp. 'He, thereby, demonstrated a failure to show respect to others and by so doing, brought his office and/or that of the authority, into disrepute. 'The case tribunal determined its adjudication by way of written representations at a meeting on June 18, 2025 which was held by way of remote video-conferencing. 'The case tribunal unanimously found that the former councillor had acted in breach of the code. 'The case tribunal concluded by unanimous decision that the former councillor Edwards should be disqualified from acting as a councillor for any authority for a period of four years in respect of all matters concurrently.' As well as being a councillor, Mr Edwards was also a magistrate and governor of Prendergast Primary School in Haverfordwest.

Hungary Pride march wins backing of some foreign embassies, but not U.S.
Hungary Pride march wins backing of some foreign embassies, but not U.S.

NBC News

time2 hours ago

  • NBC News

Hungary Pride march wins backing of some foreign embassies, but not U.S.

BUDAPEST — Britain, France and Germany and 30 other countries expressed support on Monday for Hungary's LGBTQ community and a Budapest Pride march on June 28, which was banned by police after the government denounced it as potentially harmful to children. However the U.S., whose President Donald Trump shares Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban's suspicion of efforts to promote diversity and transgender rights, was not a signatory of a statement by the countries' embassies backing the march. Parliament, in which Orban's Fidesz party has a majority, passed a law in March that created a legal basis for police to ban Pride marches of the LGBTQ community on the grounds that protecting children should supersede the right to assemble. Critics see the move to ban Pride as part of a wider crackdown on democratic freedoms ahead of a general election next year when Orban will face a strong opposition challenger, seen by some recent opinion polls as pulling ahead. Orban's government promotes a strongly Christian-conservative agenda, and Fidesz has been trying to cater to core conservative voters mostly in the countryside ahead of the elections. Passage of the new law allowed police to ban the 30th Pride march last week, but Budapest's liberal mayor and the organizers of the event said the march will be held despite the police ban on June 28. 'On the 30th occasion of the Budapest Pride Festival, we, the undersigned embassies and cultural institutes, reaffirm our support for the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex and queer (LGBTIQ+) persons in Hungary and around the world,' the embassies' statement said. The statement said the Budapest Pride March 'has been a symbol of resilience and progress, reflecting the vital role of LGBTIQ+ persons in the further development of democracy.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store