
Moral Maze Politics: Whose Morality Is It Anyway?
Nov 26, 2025
Guest
Paul Mason
Guest
Joanna Williams
Guest
Eleanor Penny
Guest
Tim Montgomerie

Guest
Tim Stanley

Guest
James Orr

Guest
Matthew Taylor
In this engaging discussion, Matthew Taylor shares insights from his role in NHS leadership, emphasizing a center-left view on morality in politics. James Orr brings philosophical depth, debating the origins of moral values in governance. Tim Montgomerie highlights the interplay of faith and social bonds, while Eleanor Penny critiques neoliberal impacts on justice. Joanna Williams advocates for personal autonomy in decision-making, and Paul Mason roots leftist morality in working-class experiences. The panel tackles morality's role across the spectrum, sparking a lively debate on political accountability and societal values.
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Episode notes
Bregman's Moral-Rot Diagnosis
- Rutger Bregman's thesis frames Western politics as suffering moral rot across elites and cowardly liberal response.
- That diagnosis asks whether any political side currently holds the stronger moral claim.
Communities Over Market Or State
- Tim Montgomerie recounts that communities, not state or market, form the richest part of human life and political health.
- He says over-focus on market/state neglects social relations and harms national cohesion.
Religion's Decline Intensifies Political Identity
- Tim Montgomerie argues religion's decline left a 'God-shaped hole' that politics now fills, intensifying adversarial identities.
- He warns lacking non-political common ties makes disagreements inflame and corrodes social cohesion.


