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Britain: Blairs majority cut to five in vote on tuition
fees
By Julie Hyland
28 January 2004
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The Blair governments plans to introduce variable university
tuition fees of up to £3,000 per year scraped home last
night, with a slim five-vote majority in Parliament.
By 316 votes to 311, the governments education bill passed
its second reading in parliament. But given that Blair commands
a notional majority of 161 in the Commons, the narrowness of the
vote only widened speculation as to the prime ministers
futureespecially as it appeared that he had been rescued
at the eleventh hour by his main leadership rival within the Labour
Party, Chancellor Gordon Brown.
For the education bill to have fallen required the votes of
all the opposition parties, plus a total of 82 Labour MPs. The
final tally saw 71 Labour MPs oppose the bill, and three Conservatives
voting with the government, enabling it to pass on to its second
reading.
The vote had been preceded by weeks of tense wrangling and
horse-trading, as the government sought to quell a rebellion by
its backbenchers.
Last December, some 150 Labour MPs had signed a motion opposing
the introduction of what amounts to a graduate tax on university
students. Under the governments plans, starting in 2006,
universities will be able to levy variable fees of up to £3,000
annually on degree subjects. Repayable upon graduation, the measure
will burden most students with debts of up to £35,000, but
universities have already made clear that they intend to raise
the cost further as soon as possible.
The government had promised several cosmetic changes to the
bill in an effort to buy off potential rebels. But it insisted
that there would be no retreat on the fundamentals of its reform,
which were aimed at further opening up education to the free market
and privatisation.
Big business and the media had rallied to back the measure,
warning that a defeat would throw the governments plans
for the entire public sector into jeopardy. Although the immediate
sums raised by the introduction of variable fees is minimal compared
to the sums required by universities, the introduction of variable
fees is regarded as critical in establishing the principle that
people must pay for services previously regarded as a universal
right.
Blairs main weapon in insisting his party must back the
measurewhich Labour had specifically ruled out at the last
general electionwas to threaten backbench opponents that
a defeat on the bill would significantly weaken his government
on the eve of Lord Huttons report on 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 Iraq.
Lord Huttons report is made public today, January 28.
Although the prime minister is widely expected to escape any direct
criticism of his role in leaking Kellys name to the press,
a government majority for the education bill was regarded as crucial
in shoring up his position against any damaging fallout from the
inquiry, especially given widespread public opposition to the
war against Iraq and the ongoing occupation.
As Blair held a series of meetings with backbench MPs to win
them over, the press was filled with apocalyptic talk of a potential
civil war in the Labour Party should the bill fall,
and of the prime minister going down in flames.
Labour dissenters would be voting with the Conservatives, government
ministers warned, whilst Blair spoke of the catastrophic
impact of any defeat.
In reality, there is little difference between the Conservatives
and Labour over plans for higher education. Tory leader Michael
Howard faced criticism from within his own party for opposing
the government bill, with several threatening to support the government
or abstain. Just hours before the vote, Conservative spokesman
Tim Yeo came under attack from his own backbenchers for going
against a measure that Margaret Thatcher would have been proud
to call her own for opportunistic purposes.
Whilst Blairs threats were enough to cut the size of
the rebellion in half, it was not enough to ensure the government
emerged unscathed. In the end, the bill was saved by a deal apparently
stitched up between supporters of Gordon Brown and the prime minister.
On Tuesday morning, former cabinet minister Nick Brown, a close
supporter of the chancellor and leading opponent of the bill,
declared that he had switched sides and would be voting with the
government.
Nick Brown claimed that his conversion was the result of an
important last-minute concession by the governmentan agreement
that there would be a review of the measure within one year. But
Blair supporters denied that any retreat had been made, and with
some justification. According to reports, all that has been promised
was an internal review of the possible effect of fees on student
numbers, which will do nothing to prevent their introduction.
This fudge had been offered up as a face-saving measure, to enable
Nick Brown to come back into the fold and thereby strengthen the
chancellors position against the prime minister.
Although Gordon Brown had made clear his support for the bill,
his ability to save Blairs bacon at such a crucial
timeas BBC reporter Nick Assinder put itled to renewed
speculation that the chancellor has been offered a new pledge
from Tony Blair that he is ready, at some point in the not-too-distant
future, to hand him the reins of power.
Blair has undoubtedly emerged from the battle much weakened.
His policies for universities are as deeply unpopular as his other
social and economic measures, and he has built a well of opposition
to his government over Iraq that even the most servile apologia
by Lord Hutton will do nothing to placate. He can cling to power
only because of the unprincipled character of his opponents, none
of whomwhether Labour rebels or Tory stalwartsdisagree
fundamentally with Blairs pro-big-business policies. It
should be noted that while the government warned repeatedly that
Blairs future was at stake, even those MPs who maintained
their opposition repeatedly stressed that this was a dispute purely
about fees and not a leadership battle.
See Also:
Britain: Blair works to quash rebellion
on university tuition fees
[23 January 2004]
Britain: Blair government
seeks massive hike in university tuition fees
[13 December 2003]
Britain: Labour government
moves to market based higher education
[12 February 2003]
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