Daniel sent us this one — he's been thinking about Ann Widdecombe's death and what it reveals about conservatism as a global phenomenon. The term covers everything from UK Tories to US Republicans to the BJP in India, the LDP in Japan, parties in Brazil and Poland and Scandinavia. His question is basically: what are the fundamentals that unite all these movements, and what are the key points of difference? What's actually shared beneath a label that seems to mean wildly different things depending on where you're standing?
Widdecombe is a perfect entry point for this, because she represented something very specific — socially conservative, fiscally moderate, deeply loyal to institutions like Parliament and the Crown. She was a Catholic convert in a party that's historically been more secular than its American counterpart. She served as a Conservative MP from nineteen eighty-seven to twenty ten, then came back as a Brexit Party MEP from twenty nineteen to twenty twenty. That career arc alone tells you something about how conservatism can shift within a single lifetime.
She also had that quality of being personally admired even by people who disagreed with her politically. Which is increasingly rare.
And I think that rarity points to something about the broader question Daniel's asking. Conservatism is unusually slippery as a political label. Socialism has Marx. Liberalism has Locke and Mill. But conservatism doesn't have a single founding text or universal doctrine. It's partly a disposition — skepticism toward rapid change, reverence for tradition — and partly a set of policy positions that vary enormously by country. Those two things are in constant tension.
The first thing to nail down is: what actually counts as conservative? Because if the answer is just "whatever the local conservative party happens to believe," we're not really analyzing anything.
And this is where Edmund Burke becomes unavoidable. His Reflections on the Revolution in France, published in seventeen ninety, is the closest thing conservatism has to a founding text. Burke's core argument was that society is a contract — but not the kind of contract you sign at a business meeting. It's a partnership between those who are living, those who are dead, and those who are yet to be born. You don't tear up institutions that evolved over centuries because some philosopher in a Paris salon has a clever new theory.
The "little platoons." That's the phrase people reach for.
Burke argued that the real sources of social cohesion aren't abstract principles imposed from above — they're the small, local attachments people actually feel: family, parish, guild, neighborhood. The "little platoon" is the unit of belonging that gives people a stake in order. And when revolutionaries try to wipe the slate clean and rebuild society from first principles, they destroy those attachments and end up with terror.
Which is what he predicted about the French Revolution, and was vindicated fairly quickly.
Within about three years, yeah. The Terror started in seventeen ninety-three. Burke saw it coming. And that's the philosophical root that connects conservative movements across countries — this idea that abstract ideology applied wholesale is dangerous, that institutions that have survived have done so for reasons we don't always fully understand, and that order and stability are preconditions for liberty, not opposites of it.
Those are the three universal commitments you'd point to: skepticism of rationalist blueprints, preference for evolved institutions over designed ones, and the primacy of order.
That's the core. But here's where it gets interesting — and this is really what Daniel's asking about. Those same commitments produce radically different politics depending on which institutions a given country actually has. In the UK, institutional loyalty means the monarchy, Parliament, the established church. In the US, it means the Constitution, federalism, local governance. In Japan, it means social hierarchy and group harmony. Same philosophical instinct — preserve what works — completely different things being preserved.
The NHS is the example that always trips up Americans trying to understand British conservatism.
It's the perfect example. The National Health Service was created by a Labour government in nineteen forty-eight — it's a socialist institution by any definition. But the Conservative Party doesn't try to dismantle it. They argue about funding levels and efficiency and whether there should be more private provision around the edges, but the core institution is treated as part of the national fabric. Because it is. It's been there for nearly eighty years. British conservatives conserve it.
Whereas in the US, a comparable program would be treated as an existential threat to liberty.
That's not because American conservatives are philosophically different at the root — it's because the institutions they're conserving are different. The American founding was a revolution against centralized authority. The institutions that evolved are built around suspicion of government power. So when an American conservative defends the existing order, they're defending a system designed to limit what government can do. When a British conservative does it, they're defending a system where the state has been a more paternalistic presence for centuries.
The same Burkean instinct — don't tear things down — points in opposite policy directions depending on what was built in the first place.
And that's why you can't just map "conservative" from one country onto another. The label conceals as much as it reveals.
Let's talk about religion, because that's another major differentiator. Widdecombe was notable partly because she was an openly devout Catholic convert in a party that's historically been fairly secular in its operation.
The Church of England is established, but British conservatism has never been fused with evangelical Christianity the way American conservatism has. In the US, you can't understand the Republican coalition without understanding the role of evangelical Protestants — it shapes positions on everything from abortion to education to foreign policy toward Israel. In the UK, religion is more of a background cultural assumption than a mobilizing political force.
Then you look at India, where the BJP's conservatism is explicitly tied to Hindu nationalism. Or Poland, where Law and Justice is deeply entwined with the Catholic Church. Or Scandinavia, where conservative parties are largely secular and the religious right barely exists as a political force.
The Scandinavian case is instructive. If you look at the Moderate Party in Sweden or the Conservative Party in Norway, they're fiscally center-right, pro-market, but they don't touch the welfare state in any fundamental way, and they're socially liberal on most issues. Same-sex marriage, abortion rights — these aren't even live debates. That's conservatism in a society where the settled institutions include a generous welfare state and broad social permissiveness.
Which brings us to the biggest internal split within conservatism globally: the tension between fiscal conservatism and social conservatism. They don't always travel together.
They often don't. And different countries resolve that tension differently. Under David Cameron, the UK Conservative Party pursued austerity — that's fiscal conservatism — while legalizing same-sex marriage, which is socially liberal. Under Trump, the US Republican Party cut taxes, which is fiscally conservative, but also ran large deficits and embraced tariffs, which isn't. Meanwhile, the social conservatism got more aggressive — abortion restrictions, culture war politics. Two different resolutions of the same internal conflict.
The Polish case is another variation. Law and Justice is economically interventionist — they expanded welfare programs, lowered the retirement age, increased child benefits — while being aggressively traditional on cultural issues. So they're social conservatives who are economically almost center-left.
That combination — social conservatism plus economic interventionism — actually describes a lot of conservative parties in post-colonial states. The BJP in India is culturally nationalist and socially traditional, but economically it's not laissez-faire at all. It supports industrial policy, agricultural subsidies, protectionism. Narendra Modi's government has been perfectly comfortable with state-directed economic development.
Which makes sense if you think about what institutions are being conserved. In a country where the state has historically been the main engine of development, conservative instinct doesn't point toward shrinking government.
And this is one of the misconceptions Daniel's question helps us bust — the idea that conservatism is inherently economically right-wing. It's not. It depends entirely on what the inherited economic settlement looks like. In much of Europe and Asia, conservative parties support significant state intervention because that's part of the national tradition they're conserving.
We've got the philosophical commonalities — Burkean skepticism, institutional loyalty, order as a precondition for liberty. And we've got the major differentiators — which institutions exist to be conserved, the role of religion, the fiscal versus social conservative split. What about the authoritarian versus libertarian axis?
This is the fault line that's really reshaping conservatism globally right now. In Hungary under Viktor Orbán and Poland under Law and Justice — at least until the recent Polish election — you saw a form of conservatism that's explicitly illiberal. Orbán calls it "illiberal democracy." The state is used to promote traditional values, control media, restrict civil society. It's conservative in the sense of preserving national culture and traditional social structures, but it's not conservative in the sense of limiting state power.
Orbán's argument is basically that liberal democracy is a foreign imposition that undermines national identity, and that real conservatism means using the state to defend the nation against that.
And that's a very different creature from, say, the libertarian-leaning conservatism you see in parts of Scandinavia or even within the US Republican Party's more doctrinaire free-market wing. Those conservatives want the state out of the economy and out of your personal life. Orbán wants the state deeply involved in shaping cultural outcomes.
The US Republican Party currently contains both of these impulses and they're in open warfare with each other.
You've got the traditional Chamber of Commerce, free-trade, limited-government wing, and you've got the nationalist-populist wing that's comfortable with tariffs, industrial policy, and using state power to fight culture war battles. The Trump-Vance ticket in twenty twenty-four represented the nationalist wing's ascendancy. But the tension hasn't been resolved — it's just shifted the balance of power within the coalition.
That internal war is being fought in conservative parties all over the world. The UK Tories had their version of it with Brexit — was the party the party of business and free markets, or the party of national sovereignty and cultural preservation? They're still sorting that out.
The Japanese case is fascinating here because it sidesteps this tension almost entirely. The Liberal Democratic Party has governed Japan for all but four years since nineteen fifty-five. Their conservatism isn't about small government or culture wars — it's about stability, hierarchy, and group harmony. The LDP is pro-business but also deeply interventionist. It maintains close ties with bureaucracy and industry in this triangular power structure. And it's been extraordinarily successful at the basic conservative task of keeping the social order intact.
Japan is arguably the most successful conservative project in the democratic world. Seventy years of near-continuous rule, massive economic development, social stability, and they did it without any of the ideological convulsions that characterize Western conservatism.
Part of that is institutional. Japan's electoral system combines single-member districts with proportional representation, which tends to produce dominant parties. But part of it is cultural — the conservative instinct to preserve hierarchy and harmony maps naturally onto Japanese social values. They don't need to fight culture wars because the culture hasn't been fundamentally challenged from within in the same way.
Which brings up another factor Daniel's question points toward: how electoral systems shape the expression of conservatism. First-past-the-post in the UK and US forces conservative factions into broad-tent parties. Proportional representation in much of continental Europe lets them split into multiple parties that then coalition-build.
That's a huge structural factor that doesn't get enough attention. In Germany, you have the CDU/CSU as the main center-right party, but you also have the Free Democrats for the more libertarian-leaning conservatives, and the AfD for the nationalist-populist wing. They don't have to coexist in a single organization. In the US, all of those impulses have to fight it out inside the Republican Party, which makes American conservatism uniquely volatile.
The colonial legacy is another dimension. Conservatism in post-colonial states often fuses cultural preservation with economic nationalism in a way that doesn't have a direct Western parallel.
The BJP is the clearest example. Its conservatism is about restoring Hindu cultural primacy after centuries of Islamic and British rule. That's a very different historical project from, say, the British Conservative Party, which is conserving institutions that were never colonized. The BJP's economic nationalism — "Make in India," protectionist trade policies, suspicion of foreign NGOs — flows directly from that post-colonial experience. It's conservatism as national reclamation.
Brazil's conservative movement has similar dynamics. The Brazilian right has oscillated between free-market technocrats and cultural traditionalists, but the through-line is often a reaction against perceived cultural imperialism from the global north. Jair Bolsonaro's movement was explicitly nationalist and culturally conservative, but it also had a strong free-market faction that was sometimes at odds with the nationalist impulse.
Nigeria — the All Progressives Congress, which is the main conservative party, fuses economic liberalism with cultural traditionalism in a multi-ethnic federal system. The conservative instinct there is partly about preserving traditional authority structures — chiefs, elders, religious leaders — in the face of urbanization and globalization.
If we're synthesizing this for someone trying to make sense of global politics — which is really what Daniel's asking for — what's the framework? When you encounter a conservative party in an unfamiliar country, what should you look for?
I'd say three questions. First: what institutions is this party trying to preserve? Not what it says it's trying to preserve — what institutions actually structure its coalition's interests? Second: what rate of change does it consider acceptable? Every conservative movement accepts some change — Burke himself wasn't opposed to all reform, he just insisted it should be gradual and organic. The question is where the line is drawn. Third: who are the little platoons? Which local attachments — religious, ethnic, regional, class-based — actually provide the emotional foundation for its politics?
That third question is the one that often gets missed in political analysis. People focus on policy platforms and ignore the sociology of belonging.
Because policy platforms are easier to read. But conservatism, more than most political traditions, is driven by who people feel they are, not just what they think. The little platoons are where that identity is formed. For American evangelicals, it's the church community. For British Tories of Widdecombe's generation, it was parish and party association. For BJP supporters, it's the Hindu cultural nation. For Japanese LDP voters, it's the company and the neighborhood association.
When those little platoons feel threatened — by economic change, demographic shifts, cultural transformation — that's when conservative politics gets its emotional charge.
That's the dynamic underlying most of the populist eruptions we've seen in the last decade. The sense that the institutions people built their identities around are being dismantled, and the established conservative parties weren't doing enough to stop it. Brexit, Trump, Bolsonaro, Modi's continued dominance — these are all responses to that perceived threat.
Widdecombe's career is interesting in this light because she spanned an era when those threats were accelerating. She entered Parliament in nineteen eighty-seven, when the post-war settlement was still largely intact. By the time she left in twenty ten, globalization, immigration, and the internet had transformed British society. Her move to the Brexit Party in twenty nineteen was a response to that transformation — a sense that the Conservative Party she'd served for decades was no longer adequately defending the institutions she cared about.
That pattern repeats everywhere. The conservative establishment in country after country has been challenged from within by factions that think it's not conservative enough — not sufficiently committed to defending the nation, the culture, the traditional family, whatever the local version of the threatened inheritance happens to be.
Where does this leave us? Conservatism is a disposition with a coherent philosophical lineage, but its policy expression is almost entirely determined by local context. The same Burkean instinct that produced the moderate, institutionally-loyal Toryism of Ann Widdecombe also produces Hindu nationalism in India and illiberal democracy in Hungary and the stability-obsessed centrism of the Japanese LDP.
That's what makes comparative analysis so difficult and so necessary. If you assume "conservative" means the same thing everywhere, you'll misunderstand every political situation you encounter. But if you treat each country's conservatism as entirely sui generis, you miss the common dynamics that let you see patterns across cases.
The framework Daniel's question pushes us toward — common commitments, divergent expressions, structural factors shaping the divergence — that's the sweet spot. Enough universality to be analytically useful, enough particularity to be accurate.
The one thing I'd add is that the tension between economic and social conservatism is the single most important internal dynamic to watch in any country. That fault line determines coalition structures, policy outcomes, and electoral strategies. When the two are aligned — when a party can be both fiscally prudent and culturally traditional — conservatism tends to be electorally dominant. When they're in conflict, conservative parties fragment or get pulled in contradictory directions.
The UK Conservative Party's current identity crisis is exactly this. Post-Brexit, post-Truss, post-Sunak, they're trying to figure out whether they're the party of low taxes and free markets or the party of national sovereignty and cultural preservation. They haven't resolved it. The US Republicans are further along in resolving it — the nationalist wing is winning — but the conflict isn't over.
In India, the BJP has largely resolved it in favor of cultural nationalism with economic interventionism. In Japan, the LDP never had to resolve it because their conservatism was never primarily about ideology — it was about management. Different resolutions, same underlying tension.
One last question, and I think this is where we should leave things: as the pace of change accelerates — climate disruption, AI transformation, demographic collapse in much of the developed world — does conservatism as a disposition become more or less viable?
That's the existential question for the next fifty years. Burkean conservatism assumes that change should be gradual and that institutions should adapt slowly. But if the rate of external change is faster than the rate at which conservative institutions can adapt, you get a crisis of legitimacy. Either conservatism speeds up — which risks abandoning its core commitment to gradualism — or it becomes a rear-guard action that loses relevance.
Widdecombe's career spanned a period when British conservatism could still manage change at a pace it was comfortable with. The question now is whether any conservative tradition can adapt fast enough to survive without becoming something fundamentally different.
On that cheerful note.
The sloth optimist strikes again.
Now: Hilbert's daily fun fact.
Hilbert: In the early sixteen hundreds, a Venetian diplomat named Ottaviano Bon wrote a detailed description of the Byzantine court ceremonial he witnessed in Constantinople, noting that during imperial banquets, mechanical golden lions flanking the throne would roar and mechanical birds in a golden tree would sing — all powered by hidden waterworks that terrified unsuspecting foreign visitors into believing the emperor commanded supernatural forces.
The original special effects budget.
Mechanical lions and singing birds. That's basically a Renaissance theme park.
This has been My Weird Prompts. Thanks to our producer Hilbert Flumingtop. If you enjoyed this, leave us a review wherever you get your podcasts — it genuinely helps. We'll be back next time.