Some delegates at the Lib Dem conference in Glasgow described yesterday鈥檚 debate on fees as a 鈥渟ham鈥, accusing the party鈥檚 leadership of trying to bury the controversial topic and prevent full discussion.
However, Vince Cable, the business secretary, said the debate showed the party had moved on from the 鈥渢raumatic episode鈥 that followed Lib Dem MPs鈥 2010 pledge to vote against fees.
During the debate on a broader post-16 education policy motion, Liberal Youth successfully amended a key passage on fees. The party鈥檚 youth wing removed a section of the original motion that had said the party鈥檚 policies should include 鈥渞etaining the current system of higher education finance, and committing to a review within the next Parliament鈥.
Liberal Youth鈥檚 amended motion, which was easily passed on a vote, accepted that the current system was 鈥減referable鈥 to that introduced by Labour. But the amended motion also said that the review of the funding system in the next Parliament should lead on to the abolition of fees 鈥渋f necessary鈥.
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The amendment 鈥 which had to be accepted by senior party figures to even be debated at conference 鈥 was something of a compromise, allowing the leadership to say the party has ended its trauma over the acceptances of fees, while avoiding a damaging defeat of the entire motion. MPs who rebelled on fees in 2010, along with the wider membership, can maintain their aspiration to phase out fees in the future.
Mr Cable, who is known to have disagreed with the party鈥檚 original decision to adopt a policy to phase out fees, ended up backing the Liberal Youth amendment.
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鈥淚 don鈥檛 agree with every line in it, but I would like conference to accept it,鈥 he told delegates.
Mr Cable argued that the party had 鈥渕oved on from the rancour and the damage around the pledge鈥 鈥 the promise Lib Dem MPs signed with the National Union of Students prior to the 2010 general election to oppose any rise in fees.
鈥淲e no longer need to look back,鈥 Mr Cable said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e got a good policy, which is good for universities, good for social mobility鈥 think that鈥檚 a good record, I think we can campaign on it.鈥
Mr Cable said he agreed the party should 鈥渋f necessary change and adapt the policy鈥, while making clear he could not see a return to a policy of ending fees.
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Conference delegates who opposed fees objected to the original proposal to change policy as part of a long and wide-ranging policy motion about diverse aspects of post-16 education.
Wendy Taylor, a Lib Dem councillor in Newcastle, said that the 鈥渕ajor and controversial change in Lib Dem policy鈥 should not have been pushed through in such a manner.
鈥淚 believe such changes should be properly debated and that we should not accept a coalition compromise as the long-term aim of the Liberal Democrat party,鈥 she told the conference.
Callum Leslie, another delegate who opposed fees, said there had been 鈥渘o real debate鈥his is really just a sham鈥. He called for a return to 鈥渕ember-led policy鈥.
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The original motion, the fruit of an education policy review led by Lib Dem peer Sal Brinton, said: 鈥淭he current system of higher education funding represents the best deal for students and taxpayers currently available.鈥 It also said a graduate tax had 鈥渙bvious failings鈥.
The amended motion removed that wording, instead emphasising access issues and saying that the review in the next Parliament should look at factors such as 鈥渨idening participation and increasing participation, with a view to reforming the system to address these challenges if possible or if necessary for fees to be eliminated in a feasible and cost-effective way鈥.
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Another amendment, also passed, said the party鈥檚 policy should be for fees to remain capped at 拢9,000, with no increase, pending the review in the next Parliament.
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