Monday, 29 June 2026

From Welfare State to Free Country: A Reflection on England’s Future

England has always had a distinctive constitutional temperament. It is a country that historically trusted the person, protected private property, and limited the state. Its older traditions emphasised responsibility, initiative, and the freedom to act. Yet in recent decades, England has found itself living within a model that assumes the opposite: that the state must provide, direct, and manage ever more aspects of life.

This essay is not about electoral politics. It is not about parties or programmes. It is simply a reflection on how a society might move from dependence to freedom — and how England’s older constitutional instincts might be rediscovered.

A welfare state begins with a good intention: to ensure that no one falls through the cracks. But over time, it can become a system in which the state becomes the default provider for everything. The result is not only fiscal strain but a subtle shift in the moral structure of society. Responsibility moves upward. Initiative moves downward. The person becomes a client rather than an agent.

A free country begins somewhere else entirely. It begins with the person.

A free society assumes that individuals, families, associations, churches, charities, and enterprises are capable of acting. It assumes that human beings are not passive recipients but active contributors. It assumes that the state’s role is to protect the conditions in which people can flourish — not to replace their own efforts.

The transition from welfare state to free country is not achieved by sudden change. It is achieved by recovering certain principles.

First, the person must be constitutionally protected. Freedom is not simply a matter of elections. Democracies can expand or contract the state. They can enlarge or diminish the sphere of personal responsibility. What matters is a constitutional order that guarantees the person: property, conscience, association, enterprise. These are not privileges granted by government but boundaries that government must respect.

Second, responsibility must be restored to the lowest competent level. Catholic social teaching calls this subsidiarity. Help should be given, but it should be given as close to the person as possible. Families, communities, and voluntary associations are not obstacles to the state; they are the natural organs of social life. When they are strong, the state need not be vast.

Third, enterprise must be trusted again. A society flourishes when people are free to act. Entrepreneurs create value not only for themselves but for others. Work is not merely economic; it is a form of human creativity. A free country encourages initiative rather than managing it.

Fourth, taxation must be kept within moral limits. Taxation is necessary for defence and law, but it is always a form of coercion. A free society keeps coercion to a minimum. It funds what must be funded — defence of the realm, maintenance of order, protection of justice — but it does not expand taxation beyond what is strictly required for these essential tasks.

Fifth, friction must be reduced. A society that lowers barriers, simplifies rules, and trusts its citizens will see energy rise from below. When trade, enterprise, and movement are light and open, people flourish. A country that behaves like a freeport — not in a technical sense but in a cultural one — becomes a place where initiative is welcomed rather than hindered.

England’s future will not be determined by programmes or slogans. It will be shaped by whether it chooses to trust the person again. A free country is not built by withdrawing support from those who need it; it is built by strengthening the institutions closest to the person so that support is natural, local, and human.

The older English tradition understood something simple: people thrive when they are free to act. A welfare state can protect, but only a free country can unleash the creativity, responsibility, and dignity of its citizens.

This is not a plan. It is simply a reflection on how societies flourish when they trust the person — and how England might rediscover the constitutional instincts that once made it a free country.

the right future for England

Modern societies often speak as though human flourishing depends on ever‑expanding state programmes, ever‑increasing taxation, and ever‑greater central direction. Yet the older Catholic tradition — and indeed the older English tradition — begins somewhere else entirely.

It begins with the person.

A human being needs a sphere of freedom in which to act, to create, to work, to build, to take responsibility. Private property is not merely an economic arrangement but a moral boundary: it marks out the space in which a person can exercise initiative without interference. Property is inviolable because the person is inviolable. When we protect property, we are protecting the dignity of the one who uses it, tends it, and depends on it.

From this follows a second truth: enterprise is not a private good but a social one. When people are free to work, to trade, to invent, to risk, they generate wealth not only for themselves but for others. The entrepreneur is not a solitary figure but part of a wider network of cooperation. A new idea, a new service, a new business — these enrich the whole community. Society flourishes when individuals are allowed to act.

The state has its own essential tasks. It must defend the realm. It must uphold law and order. It must protect justice. These are not optional; they are foundational. Without defence and law, freedom collapses. Without order, enterprise withers. Without justice, property becomes insecure.

But these tasks are limited. A state that tries to do everything ends up weakening the very human initiative it depends on. Catholic social teaching calls this subsidiarity: help should be given at the lowest competent level. Families, communities, associations, churches, charities, and enterprises all have their own spheres of responsibility. When the state absorbs these spheres, it crowds out the very creativity and solidarity it claims to promote.

Taxation is part of the state’s life, but it is always morally fraught. It is a form of coercion, justified only when it is necessary, proportionate, and directed toward the common good. A government must justify every demand it makes on the property of its citizens. Defence and law require funding, but the state should always seek ways of supporting these essential functions without expanding coercion beyond what is strictly needed.

This vision of society depends less on the mechanics of democracy than on the existence of a constitution that guarantees the person and private property. Elections can change governments, but constitutions protect people. A free society is not simply one that votes; it is one in which the individual has a secure sphere of freedom that no majority can violate. Property, conscience, enterprise, and personal responsibility must be protected not by sentiment but by law.

England could flourish again if it trusted its people more. A society that lowers barriers, reduces friction, and encourages initiative will see energy rise from below rather than be directed from above. A nation that behaves like a freeport — open, light, enterprising — allows human beings to act, to create, and to build without unnecessary drag. This is not a policy programme; it is a vision of how people flourish when they are free.

The older traditions understood something simple: human beings thrive when they have room to act. Property gives them that room. Enterprise gives them purpose. A limited state gives them protection without suffocation. And a constitutional order that guarantees the person ensures that freedom is not at the mercy of political fashion.

This is not ideology. It is simply a reflection on how human beings flourish when they are allowed to act — and how societies prosper when they respect the dignity, responsibility, and creativity of the person.