Nick Clegg went into Coalition talks with Labour demanding "a commitment not to raise the cap on tuition fees". It means he changed his mind on the issue three times in as many weeks.
The Lib Dem leadership went into Coalition talks with Labour demanding “a commitment not to raise the cap on tuition fees”. The exclusive revelation in this week’s New Statesman means that the Deputy Prime Minister changed his mind on the issue three times in as many weeks.
The New Statesman today reveals:
“Nick Clegg and the other Lib Dem negotiators called for “a commitment not to raise the cap on tuition fees” (a watered-down version of their manifesto pledge to phase out tuition fees over six years), a cut in the number of government ministers, a four year fixed-term parliament and “a commitment to no public subsidy for nuclear power stations”. All of these pledges have since been broken by the government.”
It was revealed in Saturday’s Guardian that the Liberal Democrats were drawing up plans to “abandon Nick Clegg’s flagship policy to scrap university tuition fees” two months before the general election. But on April 13th, Nick Clegg recorded a YouTube video for the annual NUS conference in which said “I really think tuition fees are wrong”. Just a day later, the Lib Dem manifesto pledged to:
“Scrap unfair university tuition fees for all students taking their first degree, including those studying part-time, saving them over £10,000 each.”
It now appears that Nick Clegg changed his mind on the issue three times in as many weeks. The revelation will place further pressure on Nick Clegg after his decision to support a near trebling in the level of tuition fees from £3,290 per year to £9,000. The New Statesman also confirm that “the Lib Dems never had any intention of sticking to their election pledge to delay spending cuts until next year.”
30 Responses to “Clegg wanted Lib-Lab Coalition to commit to cap on tuition fees”
Shamik Das
Clegg wanted Lib-Lab Coalition to commit to cap on tuition fees as he changed his mind 3 times in 3 months http://bit.ly/c87z3s @leftfootfwd
Jason Keen
Astonishing: http://bit.ly/acQRBs
Roland Horne
RT @wdjstraw: Nick Clegg changed his mind 3 times in 3 weeks on tuition fees. http://bit.ly/c87z3s
Michael Ellis
RT @wdjstraw: Nick Clegg changed his mind 3 times in 3 weeks on tuition fees. http://bit.ly/c87z3s
Duncan Stott
You’re ignoring the difference between “scrap” and “raise the cap” to get to this conclusion.
The manifesto pledge was to scrap fees. As the Guardian revealed on Saturday, plans the LDs planned to drop this pledge for coalition negotiations. The policy was just an aspiration for if we managed to form a majority government.
The NUS pledge was to oppose a rise in the cap on fees. That was consistently campaigned for during the election, during the coalition negotiations, and right up until the publication of the Browne review.