Is Her Majesty鈥檚 Official Opposition shortly to be led by a man whose policies are (Breton) capped by a pledge to scrap tuition fees and reintroduce student maintenance grants at a cost of 拢10 billion a year?
With the leadership vote closing at noon today and the result to be announced on Saturday, it鈥檚 worth taking a look at what the four candidates have had to say on English higher education and UK research. Significant changes to Labour policies in these areas 鈥 and possibly magnetic levitation trains 鈥 are in prospect.
Jeremy Corbyn鈥檚 , the first detailed policy he unveiled in the leadership campaign, is seen as one of the key factors that helped him build popularity among the large numbers of young people signing up to vote.
Some would argue that a Corbyn victory would invigorate public debate by challenging the 拢9,000 fee system and giving political momentum to the idea of directly publicly funded higher education. Others would argue that his fees policy confirms his status as a nailed-on election loser.
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Corbyn鈥檚 fees policy would draw some flak should he win. The Sun recently ran a piece along the lines of 鈥10 reasons why Jeremy Corbyn is unelectable鈥 (from memory, as I can鈥檛 find it online), with his tuition fees policy featuring prominently, on the grounds that it would make those who haven鈥檛 been through higher education pay for those who do. Although if we鈥檙e applying this logic to public spending, I鈥檒l have a reimbursement of whatever I paid towards London鈥檚 outrageous 拢15 billion Crossrail, which won鈥檛 benefit me.
Possibly feeling the heat from Corbyn鈥檚 fees policy, Andy Burnham said in his that he would 鈥渆stablish a new Beveridge-style commission鈥 that would 鈥渓ook at鈥 key changes including 鈥渁 new graduate tax to support young people into apprenticeships as well as university鈥. It would be interesting to see how the commission finds a way around the recurring objections to a graduate tax.
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Yvette Cooper has also expressed more muted support for a during the leadership campaign. Prominent in Cooper鈥檚 campaign team is Liam Byrne, Labour鈥檚 shadow universities, science and skills minister, another longstanding graduate tax supporter. 鈥淚 think Yvette is going to win,鈥 last week 鈥 but I suppose he would have to say that.
Liz Kendall that 鈥渃hildren鈥檚 early years will be my priority as leader, not cutting university tuition fees鈥, seemingly endorsing the 拢9,000 status quo.
On science, I imagine it was Byrne who wrote Cooper鈥檚 July speech in which she called for 鈥渁 revolution in science and research鈥 and a 3 per cent GDP target for spending on science and R&D, so the UK can create more high-skilled, high-wage jobs.
Cooper鈥檚 team submitted a version of that speech in response to Scientists for Labour, when the group from all the leadership candidates earlier this year.
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Kendall鈥檚 lengthy and enthusiastic response (which feels a little sad now) included a warning that 鈥渦niversities are being hit by the migration cap. Including students in the immigration cap both weakens UK university income and limits the flow of high quality STEM graduates in the UK.鈥
Burnham said he wanted to boost science and engineering via 鈥渁 fundamental shift in professional and technical education in this country, so it is a route of equal prestige, and equally supported, as that of university. We must undo the legacy of the Conservative government of the 1980s which dismantled our apprenticeship system, as part of a wider attack on industry.鈥
Corbyn鈥檚 response called for more science investment: 鈥淲hile other countries invest in magnetic levitation train networks, ours remain old and unreliable with expensive fares鈥nd we rank just 10th in Europe for superfast broadband coverage and only 34th globally for download speeds.鈥
Corbyn continued: 鈥淥nly a strategic state that supports innovation can close this infrastructure deficit that is holding the UK back, and meaning our science, technology and engineering skills are not being used to their full potential.鈥
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Kendall seems certain to finish fourth, so Labour鈥檚 position on fees will change from the Miliband 拢6,000 fee policy to either a Corbyn 鈥渟crap fees鈥 policy or a Cooper/Burnham graduate tax (assuming the victorious candidate implements the policy they advocated in the campaign, of course). Either way, there will be a significant contrast between the Conservatives鈥 拢9,000 policy and Labour鈥檚.
Whether any of these policies help the eventual winner be taken seriously as a leader is another matter.
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