Seriously? Britain’s National Health Service Pushes the ‘Benefits’ of First-Cousin Marriage
Britain’s National Health Service quietly published guidance praising supposed “benefits” of first-cousin marriage, and yes, the reaction was immediate and enraged. This isn’t a neutral public-health briefing — it reads like cultural apologetics dressed up as scientific advice. From a conservative standpoint, that’s unacceptable when real health risks and social costs are on the line.
The NHS statement claimed that cousin unions are linked to “stronger extended family support systems and economic advantages.” That framing sidesteps well-documented medical harms and sweeps aside the voices of women who suffer under oppressive cultural norms. Conservatives should call out government institutions that prioritize ideology and cultural sensitivity over safety and common sense.
British history has plenty of royal examples of close-kin marriage, but citing dynastic oddities from half a millennium ago doesn’t make this a sound modern policy. We live in a world of genetics, data, and clear outcomes, not romanticized myths about family solidarity. When a taxpayer-funded agency starts touting supposed “advantages” without weighing the scientific costs, alarm bells should ring.
Here is the quoted guidance exactly as published: “Guidance published last week by the NHS England’s Genomics Education Programme says first-cousin marriage is linked to “stronger extended family support systems and economic advantages.””
And here is the rest of that passage, unedited: “But the practice has also been linked to oppression of women and also has a proven increased risk of genetic disease in offspring of first-cousin relationships.”
Richard Holden, the Tory MP, warned bluntly: “Our NHS should stop taking the knee to damaging and oppressive cultural practices. The Conservatives want to see an end to cousin marriage as a backdoor to immigration too, but Labour are deaf to these sensible demands. Sir Keir Starmer should stop running scared of the misogynistic community controllers and their quislings who appear in the form of cultural relativist-obsessed sociology professors, and ban a practice the overwhelming majority, from every community in Britain, want to see ended for good.”
That quoted intervention captures the wider conservative frustration: government capitulation to cultural practices that harm citizens and erode social cohesion. The core complaint isn’t xenophobia — it’s protection of public health and of vulnerable people within communities. When policy makers bow to fear of being labeled intolerant, they gamble with real human lives.
Critics have also pointed to demographic context: “Critics say the NHS is trying to appease the large number of Muslim migrants who have flooded the UK in recent years. 1.6 million Pakistanis lived in Great Britain as of 2021, or 2.2% of the population. Pakistanis have an insanely high rate of incest – a whopping 61% of all marriages are consanguineous. This has followed Pakistanis to the UK – 55% of all married Pakistanis in Great Britain are wed to their cousins.”
Those statistics are brutal and consequential; they are not fodder for cultural hand-wringing. Multiple studies have linked consanguineous unions with a significantly higher incidence of genetic disorders, and the NHS should be clear-eyed about that. Public health guidance that downplays measurable harms while elevating cultural comfort is failing its duty.
Look at the numbers reported elsewhere: consanguineous unions create a disproportionate share of congenital conditions relative to their share of births. Conservative policy should press for transparency, targeted genetic counseling, and strong support for women’s autonomy within all communities. That means telling uncomfortable truths and resisting the urge to pander.
The backlash on social media was swift and justified; citizens don’t want their health service promoting practices that raise serious genetic and social red flags. The NHS removed the guidance after intense criticism, which suggests they knew it would not withstand scrutiny. But removal is not enough; there needs to be accountability and a recalibration of priorities.
Republicans and conservatives in Britain and abroad should insist that public institutions put health and social welfare first. That means resisting cultural relativism when it shields practices that oppress women or endanger children. It also means demanding clear, evidence-based guidance from government-funded agencies.
This controversy is symptomatic of a broader problem: Western institutions increasingly value ideological framing over empirical outcomes. Whether it’s education, health, or immigration policy, the result is the same — decisions that ignore long-term harms for the sake of appearing tolerant. Conservatives must keep calling for policies that protect citizens, not placate special interests.
Policy responses should be practical and principled: fund genetic counseling programs, educate healthcare workers about risks, and create pathways for communities to adopt safer practices without feeling attacked. At the same time, legislate where necessary to protect children and women from coercive cultural practices. Leadership requires courage, not performative neutrality.
To be clear, this is not an attack on any faith or community; it is a call for common-sense public health and protection of the vulnerable. Conservatives can and should oppose harmful practices across cultures while still defending religious freedom and immigrant integration. The difference is simple: support and accountability, not silence and accommodation.
The NHS episode should be a lesson: when government agencies drift into cultural advocacy, voters must respond. Elect leaders who will prioritize scientific evidence, family health, and the rule of law. That is how you preserve both liberal freedoms and community well-being.
Darnell Thompkins is a Canadian-born American and conservative opinion writer who brings a unique perspective to political and cultural discussions. Passionate about traditional values and individual freedoms, Darnell’s commentary reflects his commitment to fostering meaningful dialogue. When he’s not writing, he enjoys watching hockey and celebrating the sport that connects his Canadian roots with his American journey.