Europe South Asia Asia Pacific Americas Middle East Africa BBC Homepage World Service Education



Front Page

World

UK

UK Politics

Business

Sci/Tech

Health

Education

Sport

Entertainment

Talking Point
On Air
Feedback
Low Graphics
Help

Tuesday, June 9, 1998 Published at 10:23 GMT 11:23 UK


Education

31 MPs rebel over student grants

Protesters outside Parliament made their point with Labour MPs

The government has failed to avert a backbench rebellion over the replacement of student maintenance grants with loans.

The late-night sitting saw 31 Labour MPs defy the whip and vote against the government while 15 more abstained.

The vote was returned as 176 for the amendment and 313 against - a government majority of 137.

The opposition came during the third and last reading of the Teaching and Higher Education Bill in the House of Commons.

MPs were also due to vote on £1,000-a-year tuition fees but the debate ran out of its allotted time. MPs only got the chance to vote on the tabled amendment to the system of maintenance grants laid out in the Bill.


Tony Benn speaks in favour of the amendment
The vote came at the end of a six-hour debate. But crucially, before the debate started, the government made three consecutive statements in the House. Then during the debate, several MPs made lengthy contributions in favour of the government's position.

This meant the last two amendments that were to be dealt with, both on tuition fees, could not be debated as time had run out.

The amendment that was voted on, and rejected, would have saved maintenance grants.

Earlier in the evening MPs also voted to reject a Tory amendment tabled to change the so-called "Scottish anomaly" which distinguishes between students who live in Scotland and go to Scottish universities and other UK residents who attend Scottish universities.


[ image: Tony Benn eloquently led the pro-amendment debate]
Tony Benn eloquently led the pro-amendment debate
It was backed by left-wing Labour backbenchers such as Tony Benn and Jeremy Corbyn. They saw it as a chance to defend maintenance grants and had joined protesters earlier in the day by comedians, pop stars and students groups in submitting a letter to the Prime Minister urging support. At one stage Mr Corbyn asked what kind of an incentive it was for a person from a poor background to apply for university if he or she knew they would leave £10,000 in debt.


[ image: Secretary of State, David Blunkett]
Secretary of State, David Blunkett
The Labour rebels were supported by the Opposition. Tory education spokesman Damian Green (Ashford) said the government was "throwing out the baby of common decency with the bath-water of socialism - betraying the sense of common decency which brought many of their own number into Parliament in the first place".

But the government remained behind the Bill as proposed.

Although the Secretary of State, David Blunkett, made concessions to the rebels earlier in the day by announcing a £143m package of support for higher education, he was scathing during the debate.


Mr Blunkett : "The manifesto committment was absolutely explicit..."
He insisted the vote was not on fees. "We are talking about ensuring that students have the money at the point they need it and they repay at the point they can afford to repay it.

"It is for a modern Britain, in a new century that we're asking people to vote against this amendment."

Who ignored the whip:

Those who rebelled to vote for the rebel amendment to retain students' maintenance grants were:

Diane Abbott (Hackney N and Stoke Newington)
Tony Benn (Chesterfield)
Ronnie Campbell (Blyth Valley)
Dennis Canavan (Falkirk W)
Jeremy Corbyn (Islington N)
Ann Cryer (Keighley)
John Cryer (Hornchurch)
Lawrence Cunliffe (Leigh)
Tam Dalyell (Linlithgow)
Denzil Davies (Llanelli)
William Etherington (Sunderland N)
Jim Fitzpatrick (Poplar and Canning Town)
Bernie Grant (Tottenham)
Kelvin Hopkins (Luton N)
Dr Lynne Jones (Birmingham Selly Oak)
Terry Lewis (Worsley)
Ken Livingstone (Brent E)
John McAllion (Dundee E)
Alice Mahon (Halifax)
Dr John Marek (Wrexham)
Jim Marshall (Leicester S)
Austin Mitchell (Great Grimsby)
Kerry Pollard (St Albans)
Sir Ray Powell (Ogmore)
Allan Rogers (Rhondda)
Ted Rowlands (Merthyr Tydfil and Rhymney)
Alan Simpson (Nottingham S)
Dennis Skinner (Bolsover)
Llewellyn Smith (Blaneau Gwent)
Ian Stewart (Eccles)
Audrey Wise (Preston).




Advanced options | Search tips




Back to top | BBC News Home | BBC Homepage | ©


Education Contents

Features
Hot Topics
UK Systems
League Tables
Relevant Stories

08 Jun 98 | Education
Concessions on fees as MPs prepare to rebel

08 Jun 98 | UK Politics
Labour revolt bigger than expected

08 Jun 98 | UK Politics
Government sees off Scottish fees challenge

08 Jun 98 | UK Politics
Stars and students protest over tuition fees





Internet Links

Hansard report of debate

Education Department info on student support


The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.




In this section

'Golden hellos' fail to attract new teachers

Children join online Parliament

Pupils 'too ignorant to vote'

Red tape toolkit 'not enough'

Poor report for teacher training consortium

Specialist schools' results triumph

Ex-headmaster guilty of more sex charges

Blunkett welcomes Dyke's education commitment

Web funding for specialist teachers

Local authorities call for Woodhead's sacking

Dyslexic pensioner wins PhD

Armed forces children need school help

Black pupils 'need better-trained teachers'

College 'is not cool'