
Guardian columnist leaped to the defence of redbrick graduates now supposedly dominating Jeremy Corbyn鈥檚 shadow cabinet. The journalist objected to a recent article on Labour鈥檚 鈥渂rain transplant鈥 under its new leader in The Spectator and to Tristram Hunt鈥檚 appeal to University of Cambridge students 鈥 whom he called the 鈥渢op 1 per cent鈥 鈥 to recapture the Labour Party. Mr Jones, a University of Oxford graduate, said the dominance of Oxbridge in politics was not good for democracy. 鈥淲e need far more balance 鈥 including from redbrick universities鈥nd those who haven鈥檛 been to university in the first place,鈥 he added. That message has not permeated The Guardian itself, where, Mr Jones said, many staff are drawn from the two institutions.
鈥淲ould you send your children to one of these colleges?鈥 That was the question from James O鈥橞rien, host of BBC Two鈥檚 Newsnight, to Jo Johnson, the universities and science minister, on 6 November as he highlighted recent scandals about for-profit institutions of dubious quality benefiting from public funding, and questioned the minister about the higher education Green Paper. It brought an uncomfortable three-second silence from Mr Johnson as he worked out how best to answer. 鈥淲here there鈥檚 high-quality education, we should be encouraging people to go to university,鈥 was what he eventually managed. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 work out whether that鈥檚 a 鈥榶es鈥 or a 鈥榥o鈥, Jo,鈥 responded Mr O鈥橞rien. 鈥淭here are lots of routes in life,鈥 countered the minister. The Huffington Post as 鈥渃ringe-worthy鈥.
More awkward questions elsewhere 鈥 specifically for the Higher Education Funding Council for England and the Office for Fair Access on how to comment on a Green Paper that spells the end of their existence. Madeleine Atkins, Hefce鈥檚 chief executive, went for euphemism in saying the organisation would 鈥渓ook forward to contributing to the debates and developments it will foster鈥. Les Ebdon welcomed the Green Paper鈥檚 鈥減roposal that the director of fair access should play a specific and strengthened role within the proposed new Office for Students鈥. Given that Professor Ebdon is the director of fair access, it鈥檚 no surprise that he welcomed the prospect of his continued employment. Other staff in the two bodies will also be hoping to keep their jobs if the OfS is born, a hope that will be shared by many in the sector.
A students鈥 union officer accused of tweeting 鈥#killallwhitemen鈥 will not face prosecution, on 4 November. Bahar Mustafa, a diversity officer at Goldsmiths, University of London, was charged with sending a grossly offensive message via a public communication network, but the case was dropped shortly before she was due in court. The allegations against Ms Mustafa, which she denied, surfaced after she said in a Facebook posting that white people and men of any ethnicity should not attend a students鈥 union event intended for ethnic minority women. She had claimed that as an ethnic minority woman, she 鈥渃annot be racist or sexist towards white men, because racism and sexism describe structures of privilege based on race or gender鈥. Mike Schwarz, her solicitor, told The Guardian that the Crown Prosecution Service鈥檚 handling of the case 鈥渃alls into question their ability to make sensible judgments on delicate issues鈥 around free speech.
Rather more damagingly for Oxford, it was also under the microscope after it was urged to review its decision to accept a 拢75 million donation from Russian 鈥渙ligarch鈥 Len Blavatnik, Britain鈥檚 richest man, to create the Blavatnik School of Government. Signatories to a on 3 November urged Oxford to 鈥渟top selling its reputation and prestige to Putin鈥檚 associates鈥, arguing that in 2008 and 2009 a large number of BP鈥檚 workforce in Russia was 鈥渇orced out鈥 in a dispute between the company and a group of Russian billionaires, among them Mr Blavatnik. The letter attracted widespread media coverage and prompted Observer columnist Nick Cohen on 8 November that 鈥渨hen universities take millions from Russian oligarchs or Saudi theocrats they are doing what the Conservatives want them to do: relieving the burden on the taxpayer by establishing a public-private partnership鈥.
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