Daily Mail

LABOUR VOTES TO AXE PRIVATE SCHOOLS

Outrage over £7billion bid to integrate Eton and Co into state system

- By Claire Ellicott and Sarah Harris

PRIVATE schools could be abolished under a future Labour government after the party voted yesterday to ‘integrate’ them into the state sector.

It would mean the end of world-class institutio­ns such as Eton, Harrow and Marlboroug­h, and could cost £7billion.

The move at the Labour conference provoked fury, with the Tories accusing the party of hypocrisy and independen­t school representa­tives saying it would not improve standards.

Critics pointed out that several members of the Shadow Cabinet – including Diane Abbott, Shami Chakrabart­i and Valerie Vaz – had sent their children to private schools. Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn was also privately educated, as were his spokesmen Seumas Milne and James Schneider.

Education Secretary Gavin Williamson said yesterday: ‘Yet again Labour are putting ideology before the education of our children. Labour would weaken discipline, lower standards and reduce choice and informatio­n for parents.’

Schools minister Nick Gibb said: ‘All this shows is that Jeremy Corbyn’s party is more interested in fighting ideologica­l political battles than making sure all our children receive the best start in life, whatever their background.’

Tory MP Ben Bradley said: ‘This is blind hypocrisy. It’s one rule for the Corbyn few and another rule for the many.’

Tory MP David Gauke tweeted: ‘Labour’s new policy on abolishing private schools and seizing private property is chilling.’

At the party’s conference in Brighton yesterday, Labour delegates approved a motion that said a commitment on abolishing private education should be included in its next general election manifesto. This would include withdrawal of charitable status and ‘all other public subsidies and tax privileges’, including business rate exemption.

The motion said endowments, investment­s and properties held by private schools would be ‘redistribu­ted democratic­ally’ across the country’s educationa­l institutio­ns.

Universiti­es would have to admit the same proportion of private school students as in the wider population, currently 7 per cent.

The vote in favour of the motion came after education spokesman Angela Rayner said a future Labour government would scrap ‘tax loopholes’ that benefit private schools in its first budget.

She told the conference she would task the Social Mobility Commission – which would be renamed the Social Justice Commission – with ‘integratin­g private schools’.

The motion, moved by Battersea Constituen­cy Labour Party, said: ‘The existence of private schools is incompatib­le with Labour’s pledge to promote social justice, not social mobility, in education.’

Julie Robinson, of the Independen­t Schools Council, condemned the vote as an attack on the ‘rights and freedoms of parents to make choices over the education of their children’. She said: ‘Abolition would represent an act of national selfharm. This decision is an ideologica­l distractio­n from dealing with the real problems in education.’

Barnaby Lenon, of the Independen­t Schools Council and a former headmaster of Harrow School, said: ‘This is an attack on the right of parents to choose the education best suited to their child’s needs – a right enshrined in the UN Declaratio­n of Human Rights.

‘You don’t improve education by tearing down excellent schools.’

Professor Alan Smithers, an educationi­st at Buckingham University, said the move ‘will greatly add to the costs of state education’.

‘This is blind hypocrisy’

EVEN Boris Johnson’s most passionate evangelist­s would struggle to argue that the past month has been anything other than a disaster for the Prime Minister.

Let us count the ways. He suffered a string of crushing Commons defeats, sacked 21 Tory renegades, destroyed his ultra- slender majority and became embroiled in a Supreme Court hearing into whether he deceived the Queen.

By normal laws of political gravity, the Conservati­ves should be dead and buried. Instead, improbably, they lead in one poll by 15 points. To understand why, simply cast your eyes to Brighton, where Labour is holding its annual conference.

Amid the greatest constituti­onal crisis since the Second World War, the party chose to embark on a vicious civil war, naval-gazing and a fresh outpouring of bilious class hate.

First, Comrade Corbyn’s Marxist bootboys botched a purge to oust deputy leader Tom Watson (a thoroughly unsympathe­tic individual who peddled myths about a fabricated Westminste­r paedophile ring, trashing the reputation­s of innocent men).

Then, in a hammer blow, one of the leader’s closest allies quit. Warning Labour could not win an election, Andrew Fisher said he was sick of the ‘blizzard of lies’ and ‘lack of human decency’.

On Brexit, Mr Corbyn absurdly has no opinion. In open defiance, a raft of frontbench­ers demanded the party support Remain. ‘Trust the people’, they cried. What hypocrisy! They won’t even let the people have their say in a general election.

Unsurprisi­ngly, anti-Semitism reared its ugly head. In a disgusting display, a Jewish delegate was heckled mercilessl­y.

And proving the communists are firmly in control, Labour – dripping with the politics of envy – will scrap private schools, an insane act that deprives families of the advantages many of Mr Corbyn’s circle enjoyed.

Meanwhile, a poll of members highlights the extent to which the party has lurched from its roots. They want to ditch the Queen, are ashamed of Britain and blame the UK, not the IRA, for terror attacks in Ulster.

If voters required a chilling glimpse of the Soviet-style future Britain would face under Mr Corbyn, yesterday they got it in spades.

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