
Best of the Spectator The Edition: defending marriage, broken Budgets & the 'original sin’ of industrialisation
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Nov 28, 2025 Madeline Grant, Assistant Editor at The Spectator, passionately defends marriage as a crucial social institution threatened by modern culture. Political editor Tim Shipman and former Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng join her in questioning the impact of political leak strategies on public perception and budgeting. They explore the reluctance of politicians to embrace pro-family policies and analyze the implications of Britain's Industrial Revolution on contemporary societal issues. The trio also discusses the recent OBR Budget leak's potential motivations and its consequences.
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Marriage Under Dual Cultural Attack
- Marriage is under attack from both left-wing feminism and online 'red pill' culture, distorting public views of the institution.
- Madeline Grant argues traditional marriage remains the best-studied structure for children's and society's stability.
Marriage Correlates With Better Child Outcomes
- Evidence shows married households deliver better education and wellbeing outcomes even after controlling for income and other factors.
- Grant says public reluctance to criticise absent fathers lets social outcomes worsen without honest policy debate.
Use Fiscal Policy To Support Families
- Politicians should consider household-level incentives rather than strictly individual-focused tax policy.
- Kwasi Kwarteng suggests incentivising marriage via fiscal policy could support family stability.




