
What's the point of a Labour government that allows child poverty?
Photo byLet's be truly unfashionable and talk of political morality: what is the moral core of social democracy? I'm talking not of 'the government' but the individuals sitting around the cabinet table: what are the values they rely on when, for instance, taking decisions about wealth and poverty?
This is timely for two reasons. First, the near-at-hand one. As Labour moves closer to right-wing populist thinking on immigration curbs, welfare cuts and social conservatism, the 'who are these people?' question becomes unavoidable, to the point where it is beginning, perhaps, to seep into opinion polling.
The second reason is on an epic scale. Matthew Arnold noted the 'melancholy, long, withdrawing roar' of Christianity as the moral core of this country. He was writing around 1850 but throughout the 20th century British socialist thinking rested heavily not just on the Christian moral code – as Harold Wilson famously put it, there was 'more Methodism than Marx' in the Labour Party – but on the assumption that this code was a general core belief system, which could be used and appealed to, even when unnamed. Was this a dangerous assumption?
Most senior Labour people, even if they became intellectual agnostics, had begun with the Church. Ramsay MacDonald grew up in the Free Church of Scotland and taught in Church schools, though he later became a humanist. Clement Attlee came from a line of devout Anglicans, and said he believed in the ethics of Christianity, just not 'the mumbo-jumbo'. Tony Crosland, currently the subject of a play in London, was brought up as a member of the Plymouth Brethren, rejecting them later. James Callaghan was a Baptist and Sunday-school teacher when young. Tony Blair was always religious, before becoming a Roman Catholic later in life.
Gordon Brown, who is guest editing this issue, wrote in his memoir that he was sorry he had not drawn a clearer line between his religious faith and his political choices: 'This was, to my regret, a problem that I never really resolved. I suspect I was thought of as more like a technician lacking solid convictions. And, despite my strong personal religious beliefs, I never really countered that impression.'
This matters because key Christian teachings and stories, from 'do unto others', through to the Good Samaritan and the one about private equity managers, camels and needles, long meant Labour objectives on redistribution, fairness and the importance of community, barely needed to be stated. The underlying assumptions were already there, inside people's heads.
But although there are signs of religious revival today, the shrivelling of official Christian religion at the core of British life has been dramatic. Darwin, Freud, Einstein, modern physics and images from space telescopes have burrowed into the common imagination. Far fewer go to church. Far fewer know the Bible stories. There was an assumption that the moral spirit would continue alive in our politics even as churches became cold stone corpses. Was that idiotically optimistic?
Subscribe to The New Statesman today from only £8.99 per month Subscribe
For there are rival ways of thinking, if not ideologies or belief systems. Decades of consumerism, then the online culture of exhibitionism, greed and material success, have eroded earlier notions of equity or restraint. The problem extends beyond social democracy: Freddie Hayward reported recently that the American writer Ross Douthat 'thinks liberalism lacks a metaphysics, an explanation for the universe which would breathe meaning into concepts such as free speech'.
Deeper waters, but invigorating ones. I was brought up in a Scottish kirk, not so far from Brown's home town of Kirkcaldy, though my father was an elder, not the minister. When Brown was in office we used to talk sometimes about morality and the influence of the Scottish Enlightenment, particularly that of the economist and philosopher Adam Smith.
In his grander if lesser-known work The Theory of Moral Sentiments, Smith argues that we judge our moral lives by standing outside ourselves: 'We can never survey our own sentiments and motives, we can never form any judgement concerning them unless we remove ourselves, as it were, from our natural station, and endeavour to view them as at a certain distance from us… With the eyes of other people.'
This empathy machine offers a more optimistic analysis – that there is a basic common understanding of fairness which, perhaps, pre-dates or stands below organised religion. We have an inbuilt instinct for fairness which modern philosophers like Peter Singer have rebranded effective altruism.
But when Smith proposes his version, he assumes a morally homogeneous world in which 'other fair and impartial spectators' are freely available to imagine. In our fractured society, with such great chasms in wealth and opportunity, and different belief systems rubbing up against one another, is that still the case?
I think it is. But at this point, let's apply this abruptly to ordinary politics. What would be the moral point of a Labour government that left office having increased, rather than decreased, childhood poverty?
There is, in my experience, still a notion of fairness rooted in the current cabinet, whether among the minority with strong religious views – Jonathan Reynolds, Shabana Mahmood, Rachel Reeves, Bridget Phillipson – or the agnostics such as Keir Starmer. Under pressure from the bond markets, disillusioned voters and the media, are they listening enough to their internal moral voice? With huge potential rebellions looming on winter fuel and benefits for the disabled, it's clear that Labour backbenchers are.
Fairness is not just about tax and benefits. It embraces the importance of controlled borders to protect the interests of working-class people; breakfast clubs for hungry children; the desperate need for more housing; the recent renters' law and the workers' rights package.
But child poverty is inescapably central to any party with a sense of justice and fairness – it creates damage for a lifetime, the growing destitution described elsewhere in this issue.
So, when Nick Williams, the former economic adviser to the Prime Minister, said recently that taxes are going to have to rise because current spending plans are not credible without them, he reignited the most important moral question facing the cabinet. They can't go on cutting benefits and ignoring tax. They just can't.
Indeed, I don't think Labour can survive as a major national force without changing direction on the winter fuel allowance, without rethinking a planned deeper round of welfare benefit cuts, and without spending more to tackle both poverty and its partner, crime. Starmer says in private that lifting the two-child benefit cap is his personal priority.
So how to fund it? There are several solutions in this issue of the New Statesman. I have heard credible plans to expand the range of National Insurance to those who don't currently pay it – people living on capital income, pensioners, landlords – or to abolish class-2 National Insurance, the self-employed rate, and roll it into income tax. Even with offsets and mitigation to protect poorer pensioners, this could raise about £20bn, similar to the first Reeves Budget. Treasury people say this would be greatly preferable to risking trouble with the bond markets by loosening the fiscal rules.
In politics, there are no final judgements. Democratic history offers an illimitable sequence of collapses, elegant or otherwise. Here and now, Labour is heading for one of those unless, very quickly, it speaks and acts a moral language of fairness, empathy and determination. We need a little anger. We need a little fire. The alternative is unthinkable. A government that allows destitution to spread may be many things but it is not a Labour government.
[See also: Inside the Conservative Party's existential spiral]
Related
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Glasgow Times
26 minutes ago
- Glasgow Times
UK has one of ‘worst statutory leave offers for fathers in developed world'
In a new report, the House of Commons committee said a maximum of two weeks' paternity leave is 'completely out of step with how most couples want to share their parenting responsibilities' and 'entrenches outdated gender stereotypes about caring'. The committee has urged the Government to either amend the Employment Rights Bill to legislate for a day one right to paid leave or commit to 'considering this vital change within its review' in consultation with employers. It has also called on the Government to consider raising paternity pay to the level of maternity pay in the first six weeks – 90% of average earnings. The paternity and shared parental leave report by the committee said working parents 'will be let down by a review that leads only to tinkering around the edges of the system'. Chairwoman of the Women and Equalities Committee Sarah Owen said the UK's parental leave system was in 'urgent need of an overhaul to fit with the reality of working parents' lives'. The Labour MP for Luton North said reform 'must start with longer and better paid paternity leave'. Ms Owen said: 'It's essential the Government's proposed review addresses the system's fundamental failings, including low statutory pay, inadequate leave periods for fathers and others, exclusion of many working parents and guardians, plus design flaws and unnecessary complexity in the Shared Parental Leave scheme. 'The UK's parental leave system has fallen far behind most comparable countries, and we now have one of the worst statutory leave offers for fathers and other parents in the developed world.' The Labour MP added: 'Ministers must commit to meaningful reforms in the medium-term, with a view to going further towards a more gender equal parental leave system. 'Tinkering around the edges of a broken system will let down working parents. While much-needed substantial change to our paid parental leave system will require considerable financial investment, this would be outweighed by wider societal and economic benefits.' Chairwoman of the Women and Equalities Committee Sarah Owen (Roger Harris/UK Parliament) The report states that the UK's rate of statutory parental pay is 'completely out of kilter with the cost of living, has not kept pace with inflation and is far below rates in most comparable countries'. It recommends phased introduction of increases to statutory pay across the system to bring rates for all working parents up to 80% or more of average earnings or the real Living Wage. The lack of provision for self-employed fathers is 'deeply unfair', the report adds. The committee recommends that the Government consider options for providing statutory paid leave for all self-employed working fathers as part of its review of the parental leave system, including introducing a paternity allowance for self-employed fathers and other parents, similar to maternity allowance. The report states that the shared parental leave system is 'extremely difficult for most parents and their employers to understand'. It said a forthcoming review must examine the function and necessity of eligibility rules, with a view to 'simplifying or removing the employment status, time in service and earnings criteria'. The committee said the review should examine approaches taken in overseas systems, including the German 'partnership bonus' and Portugal's 'sharing bonus', which provide additional paid leave to couples in which both parents take a substantial portion of leave while the other returns to paid work.

Leader Live
an hour ago
- Leader Live
Reeves signs off on £14bn to build new nuclear plant Sizewell C
The Chancellor is set to confirm the funding at the GMB Congress on Tuesday. Energy Secretary Ed Miliband said new nuclear power capacity was needed to deliver a 'golden age of clean energy abundance'. Trade unions welcomed the move, which the Treasury said would go towards creating 10,000 jobs, including 1,500 apprenticeships. But the head of a campaign group opposing the plant criticised the decision to commit the funding, saying it is still not clear what the total cost will be. Nuclear plants are seen as increasingly important electricity sources as the Government tries to decarbonise Britain's grid by 2030, replacing fossil fuels with green power. The last time Britain completed one was in 1987, which was the Sizewell B plant. Hinkley Point C, in Somerset, is under construction and is expected to produce enough power for about six million homes when it opens, but that may not be until 2031. The Energy Secretary said: 'We need new nuclear to deliver a golden age of clean energy abundance, because that is the only way to protect family finances, take back control of our energy, and tackle the climate crisis. 'This is the Government's clean energy mission in action – investing in lower bills and good jobs for energy security.' It will get the UK off the 'fossil fuel rollercoaster', he separately told The Guardian. 'We know that we're going to have to see electricity demand at least double by 2050. All the expert advice says nuclear has a really important role to play in the energy system. 'In any sensible reckoning, this is essential to get to our clean power and net zero ambitions.' The joint managing directors of Sizewell C, Julia Pyke and Nigel Cann, said: 'Today marks the start of an exciting new chapter for Sizewell C, the UK's first British-owned nuclear power plant in over 30 years.' At the peak of construction, Sizewell C is expected to provide 10,000 jobs and the company behind the project has already signed £330 million worth of contracts with local businesses. The plant, which will power the equivalent of six million homes, is planned to be operational in the 2030s. The Government is also due to confirm one of Europe's first small modular reactor programmes and will invest £2.5 billion over five years in fusion energy research as part of plans to boost the UK's nuclear industry. The GMB union said giving Sizewell C the go-ahead was 'momentous'. Regional Secretary Warren Kenny said: 'Nuclear power is essential for clean, affordable, and reliable energy – without new nuclear, there can be no net zero. 'Sizewell C will provide thousands of good, skilled, unionised jobs and we look forward to working closely with the Government and Sizewell C to help secure a greener future for this country's energy sector.' Mike Clancy, general secretary of Prospect, said: 'Delivering this funding for Sizewell C is a vital step forward, this project is critical to securing the future of the nuclear industry in the UK. 'New nuclear is essential to achieving net zero, providing a baseload of clean and secure energy, as well as supporting good, unionised jobs. 'Further investment in SMRs and fusion research shows we are finally serious about developing a 21st-century nuclear industry. All funding must be backed up by a whole-industry plan to ensure we have the workforce and skills we need for these plans to succeed.' Alison Downes of Stop Sizewell C said ministers had not 'come clean' about the full cost of the project, which the group have previously estimated could be some £40 billion. 'There still appears to be no final investment decision for Sizewell C, but £14.2 billion in taxpayers' funding, a decision we condemn and firmly believe the government will come to regret. 'Where is the benefit for voters in ploughing more money into Sizewell C that could be spent on other priorities, and when the project will add to consumer bills and is guaranteed to be late and overspent just like Hinkley C? 'Ministers have still not come clean about Sizewell C's cost and, given negotiations with private investors are incomplete, they have signed away all leverage and will be forced to offer generous deals that undermine value for money. Starmer and Reeves have just signed up to HS2 mark 2.'

ITV News
an hour ago
- ITV News
Reeves signs off on £14bn to build new nuclear plant Sizewell C
Rachel Reeves has signed off on £14.2 billion of investment to build the new Sizewell C nuclear plant as part of the spending review. The Chancellor is set to confirm the funding at the GMB Congress on Tuesday. Energy Secretary Ed Miliband said new nuclear power capacity was needed to deliver a 'golden age of clean energy abundance'. Trade unions welcomed the move, which the Treasury said would go towards creating 10,000 jobs, including 1,500 apprenticeships. But the head of a campaign group opposing the plant criticised the decision to commit the funding, saying it is still not clear what the total cost will be. Nuclear plants are seen as increasingly important electricity sources as the Government tries to decarbonise Britain's grid by 2030, replacing fossil fuels with green power. The last time Britain completed one was in 1987, which was the Sizewell B plant. Hinkley Point C, in Somerset, is under construction and is expected to produce enough power for about six million homes when it opens, but that may not be until 2031. The Energy Secretary said: 'We need new nuclear to deliver a golden age of clean energy abundance, because that is the only way to protect family finances, take back control of our energy, and tackle the climate crisis. 'This is the Government's clean energy mission in action – investing in lower bills and good jobs for energy security.' It will get the UK off the 'fossil fuel rollercoaster', he separately told The Guardian. 'We know that we're going to have to see electricity demand at least double by 2050. All the expert advice says nuclear has a really important role to play in the energy system. 'In any sensible reckoning, this is essential to get to our clean power and net zero ambitions.' The joint managing directors of Sizewell C, Julia Pyke and Nigel Cann, said: 'Today marks the start of an exciting new chapter for Sizewell C, the UK's first British-owned nuclear power plant in over 30 years.' At the peak of construction, Sizewell C is expected to provide 10,000 jobs and the company behind the project has already signed £330 million worth of contracts with local businesses. The plant, which will power the equivalent of six million homes, is planned to be operational in the 2030s. The Government is also due to confirm one of Europe's first small modular reactor programmes and will invest £2.5 billion over five years in fusion energy research as part of plans to boost the UK's nuclear industry. The GMB union said giving Sizewell C the go-ahead was 'momentous'. Regional Secretary Warren Kenny said: 'Nuclear power is essential for clean, affordable, and reliable energy – without new nuclear, there can be no net zero. 'Sizewell C will provide thousands of good, skilled, unionised jobs and we look forward to working closely with the Government and Sizewell C to help secure a greener future for this country's energy sector.' Mike Clancy, general secretary of Prospect, said: 'Delivering this funding for Sizewell C is a vital step forward, this project is critical to securing the future of the nuclear industry in the UK. 'New nuclear is essential to achieving net zero, providing a baseload of clean and secure energy, as well as supporting good, unionised jobs. 'Further investment in SMRs and fusion research shows we are finally serious about developing a 21st-century nuclear industry. All funding must be backed up by a whole-industry plan to ensure we have the workforce and skills we need for these plans to succeed.' Alison Downes of Stop Sizewell C said ministers had not 'come clean' about the full cost of the project, which the group have previously estimated could be some £40 billion. 'There still appears to be no final investment decision for Sizewell C, but £14.2 billion in taxpayers' funding, a decision we condemn and firmly believe the government will come to regret. 'Where is the benefit for voters in ploughing more money into Sizewell C that could be spent on other priorities, and when the project will add to consumer bills and is guaranteed to be late and overspent just like Hinkley C? 'Ministers have still not come clean about Sizewell C's cost and, given negotiations with private investors are incomplete, they have signed away all leverage and will be forced to offer generous deals that undermine value for money. Starmer and Reeves have just signed up to HS2 mark 2.'