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Posts Tagged ‘Nick Clegg’

Tuition fees – what is an MP’s promise worth?

October 14th, 2010 by

Nick Clegg and Cambridge MP Julian Huppert pledging to oppose any rise in tuition fees in February this year

There’s been an interesting debate over on our Facebook wall about the Browne report into higher education funding. It’s worth reading for yourself, but it’s fair to say lots of us feel there are two important issues at stake here.

The first is the question of what it means for an MP to make a promise before an election. Is Vince Cable’s claim that it’s no longer valid because of the deficit defensible?  The pledge which all Lib Dem MPs signed was pretty explicit and very recent. Many of us find it hard to accept that an MP should be able to change a key election position so soon afterwards. The issue of how easy it is for MPs to break promises once they are elected is one which 38 Degrees members have been raising for some time, through our campaign for a Recall Law.

Secondly, it has implications for higher education itself. Is a free market in higher education desirable? Is it fair to place so much of the burden for paying on students when so many other bits of society, like business, rely on the training that university provides.  Why were other options such as the graduate tax so quickly dismissed? Many of us seem to share concerns of the National Union of Students at the way policy seems to be headed and impact for poorer students.

We are still to see final proposals and still don’t know what Lib Dem MPs will do- it does that a fair few seem willing to rebel in order to keep their promise.  38 Degrees is in touch with NUS, who we’ve worked with before on this. hopefully our style of people powered campaigning can make sure neither of these issues brushed under the carpet.

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Election TV Debates: let us ask the questions

February 11th, 2010 by

Party leaders will debate before the election

Party leaders will debate before the election

With the 38 Degrees’ general election consultation in its final phase, one of the ideas that has emerged has already become a campaign. Several people suggested that the TV leadership debates in the run-up to the general election would be a good way for us to get involved: it’s a chance to make sure that ordinary voters get heard, rather than just the usual suspects.

So, we were concerned when we saw the news that politicians and their spin doctors are already squabbling about how to make the debates work. There’s a danger that it will become another opportunity for polished political performances, without putting our would-be leaders on the spot about the issues that we care about.

At first, these debates seemed like a step in the right direction. But there can’t be open debate if the people that count – the voters – are left out. The party leaders and their teams want to control everything about the debates, so that nothing will be able to spoil their image. That means no questions from the audience and no real debate.

Now, we’re taking action to call on the party leaders to let voters choose and ask the majority of questions during the TV debates. We want to quiz the party leaders directly on the issues that matter to us, like climate change, public services and bankers’ bonuses.

Click here to join the campaign for real debates between the party leaders at election time, so we can get the answers we need to decide who to vote for on polling day: http://www.38degrees.org.uk/open-up-election-debates

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