- Thomas Dennehy-Caddick
- 8 hours ago
[This article was first published in the Lent/Easter 2025 edition of our newsletter - read the rest here!]
Since Keir Starmer took control of the Labour Party, I’ve found myself questioning my previous fealty to the Labour Party and the British State. Despite longstanding abstract commitments to mutualism and critiques of the modern nation-state, in practice, I became a Labour member and regular voter, who obsessed about parliamentary politics to an unhealthy degree. I can at least thank Sir Keir (and Dorothy Day) for helping to change that, with a spoilt ballot and membership card to show for it.
Despite serious misgivings about all recent Labour leaders, the selection of Starmer represented a new low. The ‘electable Corbynism’ sales pitch was a thin smokescreen for the party’s evident pivot to liberalism. And while that word might not sound so bad, my issue with liberalism is its oftentimes relaxed attitude toward death, an uncomfortable stance for a pacifist like me. This death drive was already evident in Starmer’s pre-leadership voting record, where he rebelled from his otherwise scrupulous party loyalty on both the failed 2014 ‘assisted dying’ vote and the 2015 authorisation of air strikes against ISIL (a coalition campaign that claimed the lives of over ten thousand civilians). This liberalism has only grown more pronounced in his leadership, with Starmer supporting the genocide in Gaza and the recent passage of an ‘assisted dying’ bill.
Two obvious objections may be raised regarding my critique of the latter. The first is a technocratic defence: Starmer was not directly responsible for the ‘assisted dying’ bill since it was a private member’s bill and MPs had a free vote. However, Starmer promised the parliamentary vote before the election, and it was his newly selected MPs who voted it through. Over two-thirds of Starmer's 2024 cohort voted in favour of it, while a majority of the old guard voted against it. The uniformly pro-euthanasia press conveniently ignored this, preferring to portray the result as a product of perfected parliamentary democracy rather than the outcome of Starmer’s pre-election purge of the Corbynite left, who overwhelmingly voted against the bill.
The second objection is that it is simply right to ‘give dying people … choice, autonomy and dignity at the end of their lives’. Of course, it is impossible to object to this framing of Kim Leadbeater, since it doesn’t actually say anything. In the abstract, most people would want to grant anyone “choice, autonomy and dignity”, which all sounds very appealing. However, what the bill’s advocates obfuscate is its concrete proposal: it would offer sick adults with a life expectancy below six months State assistance to end their lives via lethal injection without even informing their families. There are, of course, countless objections to this proposal, with regards to safeguarding risks, diagnostic limitations, corruption of the patient-doctor relationship, lack of conscience clauses, the legislative expansion, the lack of palliative care, the coercion of skyrocketing inequality, etc. However, the key issue is that to think even for a moment that some lives aren’t worth living is to have already lost sight of everything that matters. It reminds me of Elizabeth Anscombe’s rebuke of consequentialist moral speculation: “[I]f someone really thinks, in advance, that it is open to question whether such an action as procuring the judicial execution of the innocent should be quite excluded from consideration—I do not want to argue with him: he shows a corrupt mind.” And while thinking that some people are better off dead for whatever reason is certainly corrupt, it is infinitely more corrupting for society to tell the terminally ill, who are always prone to feeling a burden, that this is likely true of them. We must reject thinking along these lines, which can only lead to a dead end.
But what are we to do about all this then? Does this mean we need to double down on our engagement with parliamentary politics? If, by that, we mean voting, I cannot see the point: Labour, Lib Dems, Greens, and Reform all voted for the bill, whilst the Conservative PM, Sunak, publicly advocated for assisted suicide in the run-up to the election. So, as is the norm, there was not a life-friendly option to choose from. If, by engagement, we mean lobbying MPs ahead of the third reading, I might give a qualified yes. After all, I myself wrote to my Haringey MP, Catherine West, before the second reading, calling on her as a practising Quaker to take a pacifist stance and oppose both assisted suicide and the Gaza genocide. Of course, as expected, this well-known ‘Labour for Israel’ liberal ignored my email and voted for the bill, but it was still reasonable to reach out. My main qualification, though, does not stem from my absent hope that the bill will pass its third and final reading, despite the recent controversial dilutions of safeguards by the scrutiny committee, but rather because the minutiae of parliamentary politics distracts us from the real labour of safeguarding life. When the bill, or its future equivalent, does pass, the only protection terminally ill people will have left is the conviction that their life is worth living, and it is the collective erosion of this conviction in our atomised, ‘throwaway society’ that has brought us to this nadir.

Since my wife and I moved from the London Catholic Worker to Brentford late last year, prior to the birth of our first child, Silas, we have been privileged to peer into an image of an altogether different society. On Sundays, we walk a short distance from our house to attend Mass at St Mary’s Convent, the mother house of the Poor Servants of the Mother of God, which was founded by Venerable Frances Margaret Taylor, who heroically dedicated her life to care and advocacy for the poor and sick.
On one side of the chapel, there, sit the very infirm residents of the in-house Maryville Care Home, and on the other side sit the residents of the attached St Raphael’s Home for adults with learning disabilities, many with conditions which meet the current criteria for late-term abortion, such as Down’s Syndrome (91% of diagnoses lead to termination). Throughout the Mass, there is a hum of activity as the Poor Servants sisters quietly move about the room helping the residents: giving them water, wiping their faces, adjusting their clothes, moving their wheelchairs, distributing Communion, etc. But the real power of the experience lies in the evident tenderness of each interaction. The unforced love that the sisters exhibit for their profoundly dependent community residents stands as a countersign to a culture that insists that we stop “prolonging human life way past human usefulness” (to quote the useless commentary of Matthew Parris).
Ultimately, then, I believe with Dorothy Day that it is only in the ‘scandal’ of the works of mercy and the labour of love that we can begin to turn the tide on our culture of death.
Tom Dennehy-Caddick