
He was arguing, as Danny Finklestein has I think, that the current Tory policy was badly sold to the public.
The idea that you can actually socially engineer people to get, and stay, married was never the purpose, he said.
The policy, which would probably not make a whole lot of financial difference to a couple, was simply meant to be recognition that marriage is the right thing to do.
It was, he said, meant to show that the Tories “supported marriage” in a general sense – a sort of symbolic gesture.
It would of course be a hopeless waste of money if social engineering was the goal.
Unfortunately it is also a hopeless waste of money to squander much needed public funds on a symbolic gesture.
I’m all for marriage, in fact I’m just about to get married, and I believe that kids from married couples do have a better start in life.
My first reaction, though, is that freedom of choice dictates that it’s none of the Government’s business whether people opt to get married or not.
If Cameron must meddle in this sort of “encouragement”, do it through the education system and through the media. Not through tax.