Sunday Express

We pay student unions £165m to ‘threaten freedom of speech’

- By David Williamson DEPUTY POLITICAL EDITOR

STUDENT unions cost millions of pounds, threaten free speech and fail to represent people on courses, according to a damning report from the Adam Smith Institute.

It claims student unions come with a price tag of £165million a year – the equivalent of £225 per student over a three-year course.

The report states that although unions employ around 600 sabbatical officers, only a small minority of students participat­e in elections.

Accusing many unions of using cash to pursue a “narrow political agenda,” it reports attempts have been made to stop youngsters “wearing sombreros, putting on fancy dress, buying Bacardi rum, clapping, whooping, cheering and eating meat.”

The report, State of the Unions, warns these bodies have sought to limit free speech by banning publicatio­ns, barring groups from freshers’ fairs and banning speakers.

It says this has made “Jewish students, Christians, conservati­ves, and traditiona­l feminists” feel “uncomforta­ble on campus”.

Former Home Secretary Sajid Javid welcomed the report, saying:

“British universiti­es are meant to be places of open debate and intellectu­al freedom. Their proud tradition of liberalism is foundation­al for bringing students into contact with new and challengin­g ideas.

“That tradition is under threat. In student unions across the UK, an intolerant minority is seeking to silence those they disagree with under the banner of no-platformin­g and safe spaces. Their campaign of censorship is an assault on one of our most precious and fundamenta­l rights – freedom of speech.

“Protecting legal free speech should be one of the higher education sector’s top priorities.”

The report calls for the recreation­al, sports and academic functions of unions to be separated.

Only those elements, it argues, should receive university funding.

A National Union of Students spokeswoma­n said: “This is a poorly researched publicatio­n that contains a number of serious errors and/or outright misinforma­tion. At a time when people are worried about where to get trustworth­y informatio­n online, it’s concerning to see high-profile politician­s supporting something like this.”

 ??  ?? CONCERNS: Sajid Javid
CONCERNS: Sajid Javid

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