Last week 探花视频 reported that the UK鈥檚 education secretary, Gavin Williamson, is preparing possible legislation that would require students鈥 unions to guarantee free speech.
One measure apparently under consideration is the of the to specifically oblige students鈥 unions 鈥 in addition to universities themselves 鈥 to 鈥渢ake such steps as are reasonably practicable to ensure that freedom of speech within the law is secured for members, students and employees of the establishment and for visiting speakers鈥.
In fact, the last clause of of the Act already states that it applies to 鈥減remises occupied by the students鈥 union鈥, but students鈥 unions themselves have controversially contested for the past 30 years that since they are separate legal entities, the act still does not directly apply to them.
In 2018, Parliament鈥檚 Joint Committee on Human Rights that the Office for Students should publish an annual report on free speech at universities. However, the push to resolve the legal discrepancy has continued to gain momentum on the political right amid perceptions that universities are sites of resistance to the Conservative agenda. Opposition to Brexit, criticism of British imperial history and the promotion of identity politics are viewed as problems fostered within universities and now seeping out into the wider public.
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The Department for Education has that funding to help universities deal with the Covid-19 crisis will be subject to their ensuring freedom of speech; the same document criticises their subsidising of students鈥 unions鈥 鈥渘iche activism鈥. But it seems that even if a university doesn鈥檛 require a government bailout, further measures will be introduced to ensure that right-wing speakers aren鈥檛 heckled, protested or 鈥渘o-platformed鈥 by their students.
But is that aspiration realistic? The 1986 Act was itself introduced during a wave of protest by students at the height of Margaret Thatcher鈥檚 programme of privatisation and union-busting. A visit by home secretary Leon Brittan to the University of Manchester in 1985 culminated in the police violently breaking up a large student demonstration, and the next two years were peppered with student protest against visiting right-wing MPs, including pickets, disruptions, heckling and disinvitations. Those that invited these speakers 鈥 usually the university鈥檚 Conservative Association or the Federation of Conservative Students 鈥 also felt the backlash from students鈥 unions and left-wing student groups.
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As in the modern era, these student actions were portrayed by politicians and sections of the media as an attack upon freedom of speech. The then education secretary, Sir Keith Joseph, called students 鈥渢he new barbarians鈥, who were not interested in 鈥渙rderly and serious discussion鈥 and refused to engage with ideas that they did not agree with.
Although many of the actions were not invocations of a 鈥渘o platform鈥 policy (which had been officially endorsed by the National Union of Students since 1974), they were portrayed as such. In the House of Commons, the MP John Carlisle, who had been the focal point of several student protests, that several meetings had not taken place 鈥渇ollowing violent attacks on various visiting speakers鈥 and that legislation was needed 鈥渂ecause certain universities and colleges of further education persist in passing no-platform policies鈥.
A Private Members鈥 Bill was in February 1986 in response to the hostile reception that Home Office minister David Waddington had faced at the University of Manchester the previous December, when he had been jeered at and covered in alcohol. The proposed bill sought to impose a duty on university authorities to ensure that 鈥渢hey had taken all reasonable steps鈥 to maintain the right of free speech, including 鈥渁 proper disciplinary code, adequate action against offenders, fines on student unions鈥nd arrangements for the admission of the police, where necessary鈥. The bill was eventually incorporated into the wider act.
that the legislation sent a message to students鈥 unions that 鈥渢he British taxpayer will not tolerate no-platform policies鈥, which 鈥渟hould not be a part of any university鈥. However, within a few years, there were complaints that its provisions were not strong enough. The Conservative Collegiate Forum, a successor organisation to the Federation of Conservative Students, released a report in 1989 claiming that many universities placed severe financial onus on the organisers of campus events, leaving them exposed if protesting students threatened disorder and therefore disincentivising them from inviting external speakers.
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However, such complaints disregarded that freedom of speech also implied the right to vocally object to and demonstrate against speakers. A university would have to weigh up these competing notions of freedom of speech when looking at campus events, and security considerations were a significant factor in decisions about whether they should be allowed to go ahead. This is what 鈥渞easonable steps鈥 meant in the legislation.
Student protest, including the use of no-platform policies, did not end with the 1986 Act, and nor will new legislation be the panacea that sections of conservative and libertarian opinion are hoping for. But, at the same time, it will be another government intervention in university and student union affairs, at a time when the political right is seeking to bring the higher education sector more into line with its political, economic and social agendas.
Evan Smith is a visiting fellow in the College of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences at Flinders University. He is the author of No Platform: A History of Anti-Fascism, Universities and the Limits of Free Speech (Routledge, 2020).
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