As an aficionado of crazy golf, I felt quite sad seeing the pirate-themed course on Brighton鈥檚 Madeira Drive shut down in the off-season and deserted. And as an aficionado of the journalistic tradition of tortured analogies, I thought this was a bit like higher education鈥檚 role at the Labour conference: you might have expected it to be a centre of attention, yet it definitely wasn鈥檛.
Despite Labour鈥檚 拢11 billion pledge to abolish fees being the most costly in its manifesto, and having achieved electoral impact in significant numbers of key seats, it was virtually absent from Corbyn鈥檚 conference speech and from that of the shadow education secretary, Angela Rayner (although it was more prominent in shadow chancellor John McDonnell鈥檚 speech). And while the fees pledge of course figured in the higher education fringe events, there was little sense that Labour is yet addressing the key questions of policy that it raises, or has much of a philosophy for how things will be different in higher education if that pledge turns into reality.
Corbyn University of Sussex during the conference. He talked to students who have benefited from a Sussex scheme giving cash to students from families with incomes under 拢42,875, or who are the first in their families to go to university (拢3,000 in their first year, 拢1,000 a year in subsequent years). But the First-Generation Scholars scheme that Corbyn discussed at Sussex came about under the 拢9,000 tuition fees regime 鈥 as he must have learned. The scheme is the key element of the with the Office for Fair Access (which was created under Labour's fee regime). In 2015-16, English universities spent 拢725.2 million, or 27.4 per cent of fee income above 拢6,000, on access measures under these agreements.
One vice-chancellor puts recent progress on access down to two things: access funding under Offa agreements and the end of student number controls allowing greater scope for poorer students to enter higher education. There will be a 鈥渂attle on鈥 to ensure that access does not go 鈥渂ackwards鈥 under a Labour no-fees policy, they suggest.
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On the other hand, Labour is pledging to replace all universities鈥 current fee income with direct public funding 鈥 so in theory that covers the fees funding that supports access programmes and means no cut in student numbers from current levels. And Labour is pledging to reintroduce maintenance grants.
鈥淚t was made very clear in Labour鈥檚 manifesto that on the basis of existing student numbers the cost of the tuition fees policy should be fully covered by our [proposed] corporation tax increases,鈥 Gordon Marsden, Labour鈥檚 shadow minister for higher education, further education and skills, tells me in response to those questions about access. 鈥淭he funding available from this would then substitute in full for the current fees funding HE institutions receive under the existing system.鈥
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On Offa, he adds that Labour has 鈥渃onsistently said 鈥 not least in the debates in committee on the HE Bill [which became the 糖心Vlog and Research Act] and the amendments we tabled to the Bill 鈥 that we were anxious to preserve and strengthen the Offa director鈥檚 role and [to strengthen the director鈥檚] autonomy over targets and funding within the new Office for Students鈥. Any suggestion 鈥渢hat our policy would mean the end of funding for access under Offa agreements is particularly off-centre 鈥 and a non sequitur,鈥 says Marsden.
Meanwhile, in the silences around tuition fees at conference you could hear the argument from some within Labour that the fee-free pledge assigns too much priority and resource to higher education, at the expense of other levels of education.
Rayner is said to have had a 鈥渂ruising鈥 with McDonnell when Labour opted to go with the pledge to abolish tuition fees, and to have called for more spending on the Sure Start scheme supporting pre-school children in disadvantaged areas. Her conference speech focus on Sure Start and further education 鈥 the benefits of which she has personally felt 鈥 and bypassing of tuition fees looked like a deliberate statement of her priorities, as the .
Corbyn鈥檚 speech 鈥 referencing his visit to a further education college and making only glancing reference to tuition fees in higher education 鈥 seemed to reflect Rayner鈥檚 influence.
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So Labour has a leader who could be forgiven for seeing the fees pledge primarily as electoral gold dust (meaning there鈥檚 little incentive to dig deeper into policy) and a shadow education secretary whose priorities are elsewhere (understandably, given the funding crises for Sure Start and FE). It is not surprising that there is, as yet, not much evidence of Labour thinking on how to translate the fees pledge from highly effective politics into effective policy (although Marsden is keen to stress that the party sees HE not in a silo, but within its vision for a National Education Service, on which it issued a draft charter during the conference).
The Conservative conference in Manchester may show just how effective the politics of Labour鈥檚 fees pledge have been, with the government scrambling to identify reforms to the higher education system in an attempt to appeal to younger voters, following Corbyn鈥檚 election impact.
Senior figures in the sector say that they expect some kind of general 鈥渄irection of travel statement鈥 on student support at the Tory conference, but nothing on fees (Philip Hammond, the chancellor, is reported to be considering cutting fees to 拢7,500, with replacement government funding only for science and technology subjects).
Justine Greening, the education secretary, speaks on Sunday (although the policy action on fees and loans appears to be taking place in the Treasury and Number 10, rather than the Department for Education). Hammond speaks on Monday.
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Maybe, after all, it doesn鈥檛 matter that Labour is yet to grapple with the detail of a fees-free system. If, by stepping up the pressure on the Conservatives, its election pledge led to the government raising the loan repayment threshold or perhaps even reintroducing maintenance grants, then few in higher education would argue that positive change had not been secured.
John Morgan is deputy news editor of 糖心Vlog.
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