Daily Mail

CALLOUS TEACHER UNION’S PLOTTING EXPOSED

Slurs about ‘mucky’ children at secret meeting... plans to threaten head teachers ... and cynical jockeying over return date

- By Josh White, Daniel Martin and Jason Groves

The cynical tactics of a union trying to stop schools reopening were laid bare last night.

Video footage showed leaders of the National Education Union discussing how to ‘threaten’ headmaster­s who tried to get their staff back to work. The officials told their members they should refuse to engage if they were asked to return on June 1.

In a further sign of their hardline approach, they described their opposition to the date as a ‘negotiatin­g position’. Mary Bousted, the NEU’s joint general secretary, was even shown accusing children of being ‘mucky’, spreading germs and ‘wiping their snot on your trousers or on your dress’.

The remarks were made in Zoom meetings for thousands of NEU

members, recorded on May 14 and posted on the union’s open Youtube account.

A final decision on whether to reopen schools for some classes on June 1 is now in the balance, with Downing Street admitting yesterday that it was not a ‘hard deadline’.

Talks between Education Secretary Gavin Williamson and the teaching unions broke up last night without a breakthrou­gh.

Ministers are also facing a nationwide rebellion against reopening from councils. In other developmen­ts last night:

■ The deputy chief scientific adviser said changes to the lockdown, which would include schools reopening, needed a highly effective track and trace system to be in place first;

■ Former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn was poised to enter the row by backing the unions, while his successor, Sir Keir Starmer, faced accusation­s that he had gone missing;

■ Official figures showed the number of deaths linked to Covid-19 fell by more than a third in the week before the VE Day holiday;

■ Chancellor Rishi Sunak warned of an unpreceden­ted recession with unemployme­nt having soared to 2.1million;

■ Furloughed workers were urged to ‘ pick for Britain’ by taking on fruit and vegetable harvesting;

■ A minister suggested mistakes in the coronaviru­s strategy were the result of poor scientific advice;

na■ Captain Thomas Moore is to be

‘Reluctant to press ahead’ ‘We’ll be talking about putting things on social media saying “this school is putting lives at risk” – and we will be threatenin­g heads with that’ ‘Potentiall­y unsafe timetable’

knighted for his extraordin­ary fundraisin­g efforts;

■ Hopes for a summer getaway suffered a blow last night as Downing Street played down the prospect of foreign flights;

■ Experts warned that thousands of cancer patients might die early due to delays to surgery;

■ Research showed Type 2 diabetics are twice as likely to die from coronaviru­s and obesity further increases the risk;

■ A study found the global lockdown drove carbon emissions down by 17 per cent.

Mr Williamson is pushing for the reopening of primary schools for reception classes and Years 1 and 6 on June 1. Officials accept that some local authoritie­s will refuse, but believe that academy schools could reopen and form a ‘bridgehead’ to show parents that classes can operate safely.

But some senior figures in government are reluctant to press ahead if the reopening is likely to be boycotted by a large proportion of schools and parents.

Downing Street indicated that Boris Johnson was not wedded to the June 1 deadline.

Experts have repeatedly warned that the pause in education will affect disadvanta­ged children the most. And 22 European Union states have partially reopened schools without any evidence of an increase in infections.

The Zoom recordings shine a light on the strength of the NEU’s opposition. In one of the videos, Kevin Courtney, its joint general secretary, was shown briefing teachers on how to pressure schools that tried to reopen.

He said the aim was to ‘ back heads away’ from reopening on June 1 by suggesting they could be ‘putting lives at risk’. The tactics could involve multiple complaints by union members with hostile social media campaigns.

Mr Courtney described the union’s planned ‘escalation procedure’, saying teachers should use NEU health and safety documents to undermine reopenings.

He said ‘employers wouldn’t go near challengin­g somebody if they are breaking health and safety law in this situation’. Mr Courtney told teachers and union officials to pressurise heads, first by accusing them of violating regulation­s, and then by ‘threatenin­g’ to denounce them on social media.

Dr Bousted boasted that the 450,000-member NEU had ‘made the running in this crisis’ and said the union’s opposition to June 1 was a ‘negotiatin­g position’.

Former Conservati­ve leader Sir

Iain Duncan Smith said: ‘ What these conversati­ons expose is the sheer utter hypocrisy of the National Education Union.

‘They now clearly admit that it is nothing to do with what they are saying it is – it is to get back at the Government. They are using despicable tactics which ultimately will damage the economy and will damage lives.

‘They have swept aside concern for vulnerable children and the needs of children from poorer communitie­s; they have swept them aside in a ghastly attempt to damage the Conservati­ve government.’

An NEU spokesman said: ‘This Government is putting an unbearable strain on school leaders and the wider education workforce to work through an impractica­ble and potentiall­y unsafe timetable.

‘The NEU’s position is well known and well recorded. We want the wider opening of schools when Government provides the scientific evidence to show it is safe to do so. We believe the vast majority of head teachers agree with us and will work with us to avoid any prospect of unsafe working environmen­ts.

‘We continuous­ly engage with our members and the wider school community on how best to guarantee this. Families also need to know that there is a sensible and measured approach to the wider opening of schools.’

A DfE spokesman said: ‘We have engaged closely with a range of relevant organisati­ons, including the unions, throughout the past eight weeks, including organising for them to hear directly from the Government’s scientific advisers last Friday, and will continue to do so. We have also published detailed guidance on the protective measures schools should take.’

‘Reception and Year 1 pupils … who are mucky, who spread germs, who touch everything, who cry, who wipe their snot on your trousers or on your dress’

 ??  ?? Threat: The union’s joint chief Kevin Courtney in the Zoom meeting
Threat: The union’s joint chief Kevin Courtney in the Zoom meeting
 ??  ?? Warnings: The NEU’s other joint general secretary Mary Bousted talks to members online
Warnings: The NEU’s other joint general secretary Mary Bousted talks to members online

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