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Britain: Blair works to quash rebellion on university tuition
fees
By Julie Hyland
23 January 2004
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With the parliamentary vote on the governments introduction
of a student graduate tax just days away, a major effort is underway
by Prime Minister Tony Blairs backers to bring Labour rebels
into line.
The measure is deeply contentious. Under the proposal current
up-front tuition fees of £1,000 are to be replaced by charges
of up to £3,000 a year to be deducted from graduates
salaries. Combined with student loans and other borrowings the
scheme will saddle students with debts close to £35,000
on graduation, but university vice-chancellors have already made
clear that charges will have to rise even further.
With some 43 percent of young people now going on to further
education, the proposal hits many families and has provoked outrage.
In the space of just seven years, the Blair government has completely
overturned the right to free education in Britain. Not only will
the likelihood of large debts deter many young people from continuing
with their education, the right to charge variable fees will lead
to an even greater stratification between the elite universities,
such as Oxford and Cambridge, and those whose intake is predominantly
from poorer students, as well as between degree courses, as universities
hike up the cost of more prestigious subjects.
The parliamentary vote had already been delayed from December
until January 27 to enable ministers to make a deal with some
150 Labour MPs who had threatened to vote against the measure.
A rejection by all the opposition parties, plus 82 Labour rebels,
is enough to defeat the bill.
Even under normal circumstances such a rebellion would have
significant ramifications, representing the first time the government
could possibly lose a vote throughout two terms in office. But
the stakes have been upped dramatically by the announcement that
Lord Hutton will present the findings of his inquiry into the
death of Dr David Kellythe whistleblower credited with BBC
reports that the government sexed up intelligence
dossiers to justify war against Iraqthe following day, January
28.
The terms of Huttons inquiry were extremely circumscribed.
Limited purely to the immediate events leading up to Dr Kellys
death, the Judge had been at pains to stress he would not be examining
the grounds for the governments decision to join the US-led
attack on Iraq. Nevertheless, should Blair be held in anyway responsible
for the leaking of Kellys name to the press, his position
would be under threat. If such a judgement were made under conditions
where his government had lost a parliamentary vote and already
faced a confidence motion, it could be fatal.
Labour ministers have been unabashed in using such a possibility
to demand critics of the graduate tax scheme drop their opposition.
At the same time Education Secretary Charles Clarke last week
announced that poorer students would receive an extra £1,200
to spend on maintenance or pay off fees at the end of their course.
This apparent concession is a cynical manoeuvre aimed at saving
the faces of any potential turncoats. The extra money
is nothing of the sortit is to be financed by reducing the
maximum government loans poorer students can take out. Moreover,
the £15,000 per annum benchmark at which graduates must
begin repaying their debts stands, as does the principle of universities
levying variable fees.
This did not stop some Labour dissidents from declaring themselves
satisfied. Ex-cabinet minister Chris Smith and two high-profile
former critics of the tax, Peter Bradley and Alan Whitehead, have
said they will vote with the government. Backbencher Diana Organ
agreed stating, I started off implacably opposed to this
and now I am almost evangelical in my support.
Ex-sports minister Tony Banks, also a signatory to the original
opposition motion, announced his return to the fold by attacking
his former allies. It was distasteful that formerly stalwart champions
of the prime minister were now turning on him, Banks said, accusing
critics of being part of a political conspiracy to undermine Blair.
The media has rushed to Blairs defence, with all the
major newspapers declaring that a graduate tax is only right and
proper. The Mirror newspaper, which made a show of opposition
to Blair over Iraq, led the waydenouncing opponents as traitors.
In a comment entitled, Dont topple Tony over top-up
fees, it argued that Blairs days would be numbered
if the vote were lost:
That is what some of the rebels want, though. Their prime
concern is not higher education but getting rid of the Prime Minister...
If that is the reason why any MP votes next Tuesday, he will be
a disgrace to his party and country.
Irrespective of their differences with the government, the
stakes for Blairs critics and the media go way beyond the
prime ministers personal fate. On its own a defeat on graduate
tax would be a severe setback for ongoing efforts to marketise
every area of public services, which is supported by the entire
political establishment and big business. Coupled with a damaging
report from Lord Hutton, the political fallout could throw the
right-wings agenda into chaos, opening up the possibility
of working people beginning a fight back against the ongoing destruction
of their living standards and democratic rights.
Writing in the Financial Times Philip Stephens explained,
If university fees were voted down, Mr Blair would certainly
be badly wounded. But the damage would go much further. The wreckage
would signal that the Labour party had reverted to type, giving
up reform for the old ways of tax and spend.
In truth the chance of such a reversion by the Labour Party
is as probable as discovering that the moon is made of cheese.
Even Chancellor Gordon Brown, who stands the most to gain personally
from Blairs departure as his possible replacement, has thrown
his weight fully behind the prime minister over the graduate tax.
But Stephens comment underscores the more fundamental
political imperatives at stake. The government has portrayed the
student graduate tax as the only fair means of financing
higher education. The choice is either between the dustman
financing the doctor (raising education spending by hiking
up general taxation) or students repaying part of their education
costs upon graduation, in exchange for supposedly greater earning
potential.
There are numerous flaws in this schema, but the most essential
is that neither option is necessary. Education has been deprived
of vital finances over the past two decades as successive governments
have slashed public spending in order to provide lucrative tax
breaks for the super-rich and the major corporations.
Raising the top rate of tax on all those earning above £100,000
per annum, for example, would raise the necessary revenue in one
go. Cutting back on burgeoning military spending, by drawing an
immediate end to Britains occupation of Iraq, moreover,
would release tens of millions for vitally needed public services.
But such measures, the only viable ones in terms of providing
for the lives and welfare of millions of working people and their
families, have been explicitly ruled out of bounds.
During his appearance on BBC 2s Newsnight programme
on January 19, where Prime Minister Tony Blair faced an audience
of critics, such a suggestion was immediately dismissed.
In response to Blairs insistence that there was no other
way to raise revenue, one parent suggested an alternative. The
government had given £11 billion in tax breaks to the major
corporations since it came to power, he pointed out, whilst lowering
the top rate of tax. Instead of giving hand outs to the rich,
the rich should be made to pay their share, he said: a much fairer
solution.
It was as if someone had broken wind in church. Whilst Blair
stared straight ahead, Newsnight presenter Jeremy Paxman
insisted that is the subject of a different discussion
and moved quickly on to the next question.
The great unmentionable of taxing the rich had been broached
on a high-profile TV programme, however, and could not be simply
ignored. The next day the Mirror conceded that it
would be fairer to raise the money by increasing taxes on the
rich, before dismissing such an option on the grounds that
there was no reason to believe university students would be the
main beneficiaries of such a measure.
Blair himself was forced to address the issue in an interview
with the Guardian, published January 21, declaring there
was no point in raising taxes on the rich because they wouldnt
pay them! The wealthy would simply hire a whole lot of new
accountants to do this and that. And actually your tax take would
be a lot less, he stated.
From a government that has expended an enormous amount of time
and money in tracking down so-called welfare scroungers
and locking up motorists for non-payment of miniscule fines, his
argument is both cynical in the extreme and revealing as to who
are the real criminals in society.
The bottom line for Labour is that the rich must be protected
at all costs. Blairs insistence that he will survive
the parliamentary vote is based on his belief that this is also
the governing principle for his critics. Given the volte-face
by many of his opponents within the Labour Party, and with sections
within the Conservative Party arguing that it should not vote
against the government on the issue, his confidence is not misplaced.
But this serves only to underscore why the opposition to Labours
big business agenda can only be developed on the basis of an independent
political movement of the working class based on the fight for
social equality.
See Also:
Britain: Blair government
seeks massive hike in university tuition fees
[13 December 2003]
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