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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Britain
Oxbridge--the British Establishments essential club
By a correspondent
12 September 2001
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The following article deals with the political and social
role played within British society by the elite universities,
Oxford and Cambridge. Such is the predominance of graduates from
these two bodies within the highest echelons of business and politics
that they are often referred to by the conflated term Oxbridge.
The article was sent to the World Socialist Web Site by
a reader. We welcome all such serious efforts to comment on social,
political, economic, artistic and scientific issues.
In 1950s and early 1960s the British Establishment was shocked
to discover that four of its own, Guy Burgess, Kim Philby, Anthony
Blunt, and Donald Maclean, were spying for the Soviet Union.
Burgess had left Eton in 1930 and gone on to Trinity College,
Cambridge, where he fell into the company of his co-conspirators.
They formed a fashionable, leftwing clique, much the same as those
found in most British universities at the timethe offspring
of wealthy men with no comprehension of the working class they
claimed to champion. Yet unlike similar groups in universities
such as Glasgow, Birmingham, Bristol, and Leeds, these four young
men were sought out and recruited by Moscows security services.
The reasons behind their recruitment make a telling example of
how the top levels of British society work, a model understood
well by the KGB, if not by the majority of British citizens.
Had the KGB recruited four similar undergraduates from any
other university, it is unlikely that even one of them would have
progressed to a position of particular use, let alone national
importance. Yet all four of these recruits did, gaining influential
jobs in the BBC, the Foreign Office, MI6, and even Buckingham
Palace. To this day, attendance at Oxbridge provides the essential
qualification for progress through the British Establishmentthe
collection of financiers, aristocrats, land owners, mainstream
politicians and civil servants that has maintained such a firm
grip on power in the UK. Of the 42 British prime ministers who
attended university, 40 went to either Oxford or Cambridge.
Establishment sources promote Oxbridge as the repository of
Britains finest minds, where the brightest and the best
gather to be educated in the rarefied atmosphere of the two university
towns. According to conventional wisdom, this is why graduating
students tend to succeed. Yet until the mid-60s, alumni of the
seven elite English boarding schools (Eton, Harrow, Westminster,
Rugby, Winchester, Charterhouse, and Shrewsbury) were not even
required to pass exams to gain admission. The headmaster of Harrow
even lodged a complaint when he discovered that his pupils
would finally be assessed on their A-level results.
Establishment sources are also inclined to claim that the system
of patronage and class distinction has now disappeared, replaced
with the supposed meritocracy of the Thatcher years.
Yet given the fact that so many of the admissions tutors are themselves
Oxbridge alumni from the age of overt discrimination by background,
this claim seems as false as any of the other various means of
obfuscation used by the Establishment to hide its unaccountable
and undemocratic power from the British electorate. Several well-documented
cases of admissions tutors refusing entrance to well-qualified
working-class pupils have appeared in the British media, the most
famous being that of Laura Spence, the bright schoolgirl from
the Northeast who was unfairly denied a place at Oxford.
Despite claiming to be the voice of an undoubtedly enraged
British public, the professedly serious national press
generally takes the side of the universities in these matters.
This is hardly surprising. Charles Moore, editor of the Conservative
Partys house-organ, the Daily Telegraph, attended
Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge (incidentally the same combination
that produced Burgess). Peter Stothard, editor of the Times,
is an honorary fellow of Trinity. I have never particularly
liked the idea of the Times as an establishment paper.
I dont think it is correct historically, he disingenuously
asserts in an interview with Cherwell, the Oxford University
newspaper. Max Hastings, patrician editor of the London Evening
Standard, went to Charterhouse and Oxford. Even Alan Rusbridger,
editor of the supposedly liberal Guardian, is an alumnus
of Cambridge.
Loyalty to their respective alma maters resulted in
them focusing attention away from a condemnation of the universities
admission procedures towards an attack on Chancellor Gordon Brown,
who had been the most high-profile of those to complain about
the treatment meted out to Laura Spence. In parliament, a five-man
committee of MPs condemned Brown for his stance against Cambridge.
Any pretence at democratic debate was undermined by the fact that
the three panel members who supported the committees resolution
were Oxbridge alumni. The two Labour MPs who voted against it
later complained of an Oxbridge mafia and disassociated
themselves from its findings. Quite why a panel without any compromising
connections to the university in question was not selected is
open to question.
Statistically neither university can defend its policy of discrimination
against working-class state-school applicants. They currently
make up less than 50 percent of Oxfords intake (despite
accounting for almost three quarters of all university applicants).
Despite this, more than two thirds of first-class degrees awarded
by the university, the highest award for academic excellence,
are bestowed on graduates from state-schools. Figures from Cambridge
tell a similar story. This obviously contradicts the insistence
of Establishment apologists that they merely select the best applicants.
When such facts are laid before them, the defenders of social
privilege try a different tack. One foolish Cambridge don left
his notes at a radio station after he had been attempting to defend
the university in the wake of the Laura Spence affair. These stated
that Spence, like all state-school pupils, lacked
sufficient confidence to do well in the Cambridge interview. Apart
from being a frankly extraordinary and unsustainable generalisation,
the don offers a telling insight into the selection procedure.
Firstly, confidence is not a faculty of intellect,
and thus it is hard to see the justification for a supposedly
academic institution declaring it to be an essential criterion
for acceptance. Secondly, the question must be asked, who is likely
to be more comfortable, and therefore confident, in an Oxbridge
interview situation? A working-class girl from the heavily-industrial
Northeast with no family background of university acceptance,
or a Southern public-school boy unfazed by received-pronunciation
accents, crusty dons, or ancient buildings? In addition, the number
of educational advantages enjoyed by privately educated school
pupils are too numerous to mention here, but neither university
has ever seriously attempted to take these factors into account
in their enrolment procedures.
This correspondent has had the dubious privilege of socializing
with the British Establishment at various stages of his life.
One particularly revealing interview undertaken was with a wealthy
publisherthe son of a Nazi sympathizer and follower of the
British fascist leader Oswald Moseley, and also an advisor to
Prime Minister Neville Chamberlainwith wide-reaching connections
within the Establishment. His insight into life at Balliol College,
Oxford ran as follows: The state school guys were effectively
confined to their own JCRs [junior common rooms], because they
didnt know anybody in other colleges. We [attendees of public
schools] knew guys in the other colleges, so we could network
and get to know more people. This networking resulted in
a large number of acquaintances that would go on to either manage
large amounts of inherited capital or use their connections to
achieve positions of influence.
On another occasion, a recent graduate of Eton and Emmanuel
College, Cambridge proudly informed this writer that he was the
fifth successive generation of his family to attend that particular
college. He now works in the City for a venture-capital company,
despite his degree in English Literature seeming to confer upon
him no discernable qualification for such a position. The level
of public-school bias varies from one Oxbridge college to another.
Some like to recruit from particular schools to maintain their
character, hence the number of Etonians at Christchurch
College, Oxfordin 1998 around a third of the 258 Eton school
leavers were accepted into Oxbridge.
Perhaps the most outrageous case of discrimination occurred
in 1998, when an admissions tutor, Dr Eric Griffiths, humiliated
a working-class interviewee called Tracy Playle (again at Trinity
College, Cambridge). After accusing her of not being to able to
recognise some squiggly lines as Greek script, he
went on to mimic her Essex accent until she left the interview
in tears. The fact that this exchange took place, demonstrates
that far from shedding their preference for rich, well-spoken
public-school applicants, such prejudice is alive and kicking
in Britains two most prestigious universities. In a PR exercise,
Griffiths was removed from his admissions role by the college
after widespread media coverage, despite the protestations of
the Establishment press who put forward the astonishing contention
that these (publicly-funded) universities should be able to accept
whoever they like by whatever criteria. Playle was not offered
a place at Trinity, but went on to obtain a first-class degree
from Warwick University.
The use of Oxbridge as a finishing school for the British Establishment
has other benefits than allowing students from ruling-class backgrounds
to enjoy the company of their peers and to network. An Oxbridge
education allows an individual in British society to claim an
intellectual superiority over anybody who does not share his or
her particular point of view.
While the products of Oxford and Cambridge Universities, with
their sinister vetting procedures, continue to hold the vast bulk
of influential posts within British public life, it will require
a seismic shift in popular awareness to dislodge them. It is therefore
more vital than ever that democratic control is wrested back from
the network of vested interests and back-scratchers that constitute
the British Establishment. No one can reasonably expect change
to occur within the current political clubthe capacity to
obtain positions of influence within our society is severely limited
without the Oxbridge stamp of approval, a fact that was recognised
by the KGB when they recruited Burgess, Blunt, Maclean, and Philby.
Given that the popular media is beholden to the very same Establishment
which continues to control the wealth of the country generated
by the working class, given the pro-business character of the
Labour government of Prime Minister Tony Blair (who studied at
Fettes and Oxford), the best hope of changing popular awareness
is through an independent media that can speak outside the grasp
of multinational corporations and their capitalist agenda.
See Also:
Britain: Labour promises further
privatisation in state education
[4 June 2001]
Britain:
Education Issues
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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