Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
EU President: ‘A special place in Hell’ awaits Brexiteers
EU President: ‘A special place in Hell’ awaits Brexiteers
Mar 16, 2026 1:43 PM

In an age of receding religious faith, politics always borders on idolatry. The latest politician to elevate polemical differences to eschatological significance came on Wednesday, as European Council President Donald Tusk condemned the souls of his enemies to eternal damnation.

At a press event at 10:42 a.m. local time, Tusk said, “I’ve been wondering what that special place in Hell looks like for those who promoted Brexit, without even a sketch of a plan how to carry it out safely.”

To be sure no one missed the point, his Twitter account broadcast the statement:

I’ve been wondering what that special place in hell looks like, for those who promoted #Brexit, without even a sketch of a plan how to carry it out safely.

— Donald Tusk (@eucopresident) February 6, 2019

Sammy Wilson, an MP with Northern Ireland’s Democratic Unionist Party (DUP), reacted by calling Tusk a “devilish euro maniac” who “again shows his contempt for the 17.4 million people who voted to escape the corruption of the EU and seek the paradise of a free and prosperous Kingdom.” (Tusk’s defenders have said he took aim at Brexiteers like Nigel Farage and Daniel Hannan, not everyday Leave voters. However, his ments were vague enough to demand further qualification.)

Jacob Rees-Mogg likewise responded:

Mr Tusk is hardly in the Aquinas class as a theologian and he seems to have forgotten mandment about not bearing false witness.

— Jacob Rees-Mogg (@Jacob_Rees_Mogg) February 6, 2019

There are issues which the Christian Church has said occupy an irrevocable place among its teachings. A few of these include:

the right to life from conception until natural death;the inviolable right of conscience, especially the right to practice one’s religion; andthe right to property, condemning all forms of socialism as patible with the Decalogue’s injunctions, “Thou shalt not covet” and “Thou shalt not steal.”

Since these conclusions proceed from traditional Christian moral theology, professing members may not publicly break with the Church on issues of this gravity without it affecting their worthiness to receive Holy Communion.

However, such issues in the public square are relatively few. Others remain subject to prudential judgment, such as:

the best approach to environmental stewardship;the proper regulations on immigration;andthe unique contours of each nation’s foreign policy.

On these issues there may be, in then-Cardinal Ratzinger’s phrase, “a legitimate diversity of opinion.”Their discussion ought not be the place for hurling public anathemas. (After all, the previous set of issues result in no such munications; these two phenomena are likely related.) Indeed, these are precisely the areas that demand the greatest debate, engagement, and exploration at the highest levels.

Foreclosing debate on prudential issues while praising dissenters on fundamentals has led the West to an unusual impasse. The politicization of all things – what William F. Buckley Jr. called “immanentizing the eschaton” – has created its own tests of orthodoxy and heresy. It has elevated minor disagreements, which should be invitations to stimulating dialogue, into hellfire-and-brimstone condemnations. Everyone in the public square suffers for this lack mon grace.

The closest Tusk’s es to the mark is the notion that public servants will be held accountable for petence in discharging their duties. Theresa May initially grasped the potential of Brexit to outline an innovative and optimistic future. However, her cabinet was shocked to learn privately that she lost direction, allowing EU negotiators to guide the talks onto an interminable two-track system that prioritized the UK’s “divorce bill” while remaining tantalizingly vague about any future free trade agreement. That May failed to prevent her post-Brexit future of innovation from being derailed is inarguable.

However, Tusk’s criteria may as easily be applied to the European Union, where anonymous officials continually plot a course for an “ever-closer union” with little care as to how stifling regulations, trade barriers, and mandatory settlement of asylum seekers would be received by member states. The European Economic Community (EEC) simply morphed into the European Community and then the European Union – and likely, next, an EU with its own military force. Its every move constitutes a violation of the principle of subsidiarity.

“The British people were never asked whether they wished to join a political union and surrender some of their sovereignty,” Rev. Richard Turnbull of the Centre for Enterprise, Markets, and Ethics told me during a recent episode of Acton’s podcast.

But none of this rises to the level of eternal damnation. Public discourse cannot heal until it purges itself of the hubristic conceit that confuses conventional wisdom for divine decree and substitutes our private judgments for the public counsel of God.

Τσίπρας Πρωθυπουργός της Ελλάδας. This photo has been cropped. CC BY-SA 2.0.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Explainer: What you should know about the debt ceiling
What just happened? In two tweets posted earlier today,President Trump attacked Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Speaker Paul Ryan for not tying an increase in the debt limit to a recent Veterans Affairs bill that passed Congress with overwhelming bipartisan support. (The bill likely would have been delayed, though, if it had been tied tothe debt limit.) Congress must vote on whether to raise America’s borrowing limit and keep the government funded within the next month. Failure to...
Families pay more in taxes than for food, clothing, and housing combined: Study
The necessities of life include food, water, clothing, and shelter … but should the government cost more than all of them put together? A new study has found that politicians extract more in taxes than working families pay for their basic human needs. Canadian families paid more to the tax collectorthan they did to the farmer, the grocer, the landlord, and the seamstress to sustain life itself, according to a new study from the Fraser Institute, a free market think...
The balance of industries and creative destruction
Note: This is post #46 in a weekly video series on basic microeconomics. Why are price signals and petition so important to a market economy? When prices accurately signal costs and benefits and markets petitive, the Invisible Hand ensures that costs are minimized and production is maximized, explains Alex Tabarrok. If these conditions aren’t met, market inefficiencies arise and the Invisible Hand cannot do its work. In this video by Marginal Revolution University, Tabarrok shows how two major processes, creative...
New Issue of the Journal of Markets & Morality (Vol. 20, No. 1)
The newest issue of the Journal of Markets & Morality, vol. 20, no. 1, has been published online and print copies are in the mail. This issue is a special issue on “Morality, Neoclassical Economics, and John Maynard Keynes.” Guest editors Victor V. Claar and Greg Forster describe the issue as follows in their editorial: [A]s this special issue of the Journal of Markets & Morality will help illuminate, our need to sort issues into separate “economic” and “cultural” categories...
Western values can defeat Russian propaganda and Eastern cronyism: Neamtu
The fall of the Berlin Wall remains the greatest symbolic victory of freedom over tyranny in the modern age. Yet the triumph of liberty finds itself threatened by corruption and a propaganda war wrapped up in religious sentiment, according to a prominent Eastern mentator. Mihail Neamtu, a public intellectual in Romania, warns that Eastern Europe is in danger of backsliding away from democracy and the free market in a new essay forReligion & Liberty Transatlantic. “Pervasive cronyism is slowly corroding...
A British perspective on the Alt-Right and antifa Left
The violent reaction to President Trump’s Phoenix rally and the ongoing fallout over Charlottesville show the issue of the Alt-Right, and its Antifa antagonists, is going nowhere. Americans struggle to understand what kind of “conservatism” the Alt-Right represents, as well as the nature of the protesters. A prominent mentator has noted that both movements have attempted to infiltrate broader and more popular movements – against racism or in favor of free speech, respectively – in order to camouflage their extremist...
Should religious publications accept government funding to promote the EU?
The government of Poland recently funded media outlets that agreed to cover the EU’s international wealth redistribution program, the EU Structural Funds. The fact that one of the recipients was a Catholic weekly raises numerous moral and ethical questions. Marcin Rzegocki, who lives in Poland, describes the “omnipresent” propaganda, funded by taxpayer funds, intended to promote the public perception of the European Union. In a new essay forReligion & Liberty Transatlantic, he reveals the extent of the issue. The government...
When online conformity mobs imitate government coercion
The social-media outrage machine is rather predictable these days. It doesn’t take much panies and celebrities to offend the cultural consensus, spurring online mobs to respond, in turn: not through peaceful discourse or by turning their attention elsewhere, but by fomenting rage, abuse, and assault on the subject(s) in question. The notion of public outcry isn’t new, of course, particularly as it relates to those in the public eye. But such vitriol seems to be more hastily applied, and increasingly...
No, hurricanes and other natural disasters are not economically beneficial
Hurricanes like Harvey almost always leave two things in their aftermath: broken windows and articles advocating thebroken window fallacy. Unfortunately, while we can’t stop hurricanes fromoccurring we should be able to put an end to bizarre idea that natural disasters that destroy property are beneficial to our economy. For after 6,712 cyclones, typhoons, and hurricanes the evidence is clear: Bastiat was right all along. In 1850, the economic journalist Frédéric Bastiat introduced the parable of the broken window to illustrate...
Why Christians should oppose the debt ceiling limit
When es to political policy, Christians in America have a wide-range of opinions about what should be done. Even when we agree on a general principle, we tend to disagree about how that informs our policy choices. We recognize, for instance, that we have an obligation to care for the poor but differ on the type and degree of government involvement. Such differences can lead us to believe that there is nothing we can agree on. But I don’t believe...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved