What on earth is the national interest?
'The national interest' is ready shorthand for the common good, but is it just a patriotic sticking plaster hiding self-serving policies and party divisions?
Should we be sceptical when politicians claim to act in "the national interest"? The phrase is frequently trotted out to elevate policy and actions as unimpeachably serving us all. But what does it actually mean? So far the Oxford English Dictionary has steered clear of pinning down this "slippery" term.
Mark Damazer digs up its historical roots and talks to politicians, prime-ministerial speechwriters and policymakers to define a term that can obscure as much as it elucidates. Is its use just cynical high grounding or does it speak of a sincere effort to disentangle policy from personal or party interests? Is the national interest best served by a strong civic landscape where differing visions of βthe national interestβ are free to battle it out?
Presenter: Mark Damazer
Producer: David Reid
Editor: Clare Fordham
Contributors:
Michael Gove, Minister for Levelling up, Housing and Communities
Angela Rayner, shadow deputy prime minister and shadow levelling up secretary
Phil Collins, former prime-ministerial speechwriter
Munira Mirza, former Director of the No10 Policy Unit
Dame Linda Colley, Professor of History at Princeton
Fiona McPherson, Senior Editor at the Oxford English Dictionary, specialising in new words
Last on
More episodes
Broadcast
- Mon 23 Oct 2023 20:30ΒιΆΉΤΌΕΔ Radio 4
Podcast
-
Analysis
Programme examining the ideas and forces which shape public policy in Britain and abroad.