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Saturday, September 28, 2024

The voting conundrum for socially conservative Christians like me

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I’m sure I’m not the one socially conservative Christian with a voting headache ahead of the General Election on July 4.

I would favor to vote Reform. But to play my small part in trying to forestall a neo-Marxist elective dictatorship emerging within the UK I feel I’m going to should vote Conservative within the North Lancashire constituency of Morecambe and Lunesdale where I live.

Writing about my dilemma in The Conservative Woman last week, I sympathise with Don Benson’s comment within the thread: “In the current case, supporting the morally bankrupt Conservatives after the utterly shocking way they’ve behaved (and clearly would proceed to behave) shouldn’t be crossing sound minds as either an intelligent or worthy option.”

The problem I face here is that this will not be a typical ‘Red Wall’ constituency within the North of England won from Labour within the Boris Johnson ‘Get Brexit Done’ victory of 2019. 

Its Conservative MP (now parliamentary candidate) David Morris first won the seat from Labour in 2010 and held onto it in 2015, 2017 and 2019. He is an experienced, well-liked constituency MP and due to this fact I think he’s best placed to maintain Labour out. He is defending a majority from 2019 of 6,354.

I don’t think Reform ought to be fielding a candidate here. But for each seat where Reform agreed to not run against the Conservatives, Nigel Farage’s party must have been offered a transparent run in a winnable seat for its candidate.

I asked Morris whether he would support former Home Secretary Suella Braverman as Conservative leader after the possible meltdown of the party’s MPs to around 100 after July 4.

I actually have still not had a reply to my query. But if cabinet minister Grant Shapps is allowed to say, as he did in his June 12 interview with Times Radio, that the Conservatives are unlikely to win the election, why shouldn’t a Conservative candidate speak his or her mind on who would make the very best leader of the opposition within the elective dictatorship that a Labour victory is poised to usher in?

Miriam Cates, the Conservative candidate for the South Yorkshire seat of Penistone and Stocksbridge, argued on June 13 in The Telegraph that Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer is more “dangerous” than Tony Blair was when he led New Labour to its landslide victory in 1997.

Cates, a committed evangelical Christian who won her seat for the Conservatives from Labour in 2019, wrote: “From 1997, Tony Blair and his allies remade the British state in their very own image. Power and agency were taken from Parliament and the people and handed over to courts, arms-length bodies, technocrats and civil servants.

“These acts of constitutional vandalism modified Britain profoundly and have made it markedly harder for today’s politicians to resolve a few of our country’s most pressing challenges.”

She admitted that “it’s true that the Conservative Party has had 14 years to repeal Blairite laws”. But she claimed “fair-minded voters will acknowledge that such reforms wouldn’t have been politically possible in coalition (with the Liberal Democrats from 2010 to 2015), nor practically achievable alongside Brexit, nor a priority in the course of the pandemic.

She continued, “However, the nice irony is that since the Conservatives have been unable to roll back New Labour reforms, Starmer may now get the prospect to select up where Blair left off. The Labour Party has already indicated that it might introduce a latest Race Equality Act, beef up the Office for Budget Responsibility and make it easier to alter gender.

“A Labour ‘supermajority’ could vandalise our structure so irreversibly that no centre-right government could turn back the clock.”

My important concern is the effect that a neo-Marxist Labour government would have on the liberty of orthodox Christians to proclaim and practise their counter-cultural beliefs. Since the Conservative-led government introduced same-sex marriage in 2013, incidents of orthodox Christian street preachers being arrested for criticising homosexual practice have increased. This site amongst others has extensively covered the brutal arrest of Pastor John Sherwood by the Metropolitan Police in Uxbridge in 2021 and his subsequent acquittal in 2022. 

Christians who’ve expressed their beliefs on marriage and sexual morality within the workplace or on social media have also been losing their jobs under the Conservatives and, assisted often by the Christian legal Centre, have been taking their employers to tribunals.

Bad though it has been up to now decade, I think this trend will worsen under Labour for the explanations Cates has given in her political evaluation.

The traditional Christian gospel is the one hope of everlasting salvation for the people of this country however it looks as if they will give Labour an amazing mandate to make its proclamation much harder in the approaching years, hence my voting headache.

Julian Mann is a former Church of England vicar, now an evangelical journalist based in Lancashire.

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