Last week, the UK Labour Party’s leaked manifesto revealed the party’s plan to completely scrap tuition fees at all universities.
According to Buzzfeed, Labour will abolish the current £9,000 (US$11,630) university fees and bring back maintenance grants for university students.
Labour hints that it will pledge to abolish university tuition fees https://t.co/ex9iGK2qUz
— Guardian Students (@GdnStudents) May 10, 2017
UK students have been seeing their access to education increasingly blocked in recent years; last year, maintenance grants for lower income students were scrapped and the government announced tuition fees would be hiked to £9,250 (US$11,954) per year from autumn 2017.
By contrast, Labour’s plans for the higher education sector portray a radical antithesis to the Conservative government’s actions.
But how has it been received by the public?
Here are some notable thoughts on the debate expressed on Twitter:
1. Labour = Party for young people
Labour is the only party that will help young people. From scrapping tuition fees to building houses. This matters. Register and #VoteLabour pic.twitter.com/Y46VCTxmJ8
— EL4C (@EL4JC) May 14, 2017
Labour to scrap tuition fees,ban zero hrs contracts,build new houses-a manifesto for young people? @rhulpir @bycLIVE https://t.co/aBFtsUR2zO
— James Sloam (@James_Sloam) May 11, 2017
https://twitter.com/AlexJCharlton/status/864212972851343362
A Labour Government would scrap tuition fees. Higher education will be a right, not a privilege. Young people – REGISTER AND VOTE LABOUR.
— Jared Garfield (@jaredgarfield1) May 10, 2017
2. Labour = Not the party for young people
https://twitter.com/daniel_wemyss/status/862365943791595521
3. It’s not about young people, it’s just the right thing to do.
I don't think Labour are scrapping tuition fees so young people vote for them, they're doing it because it's the right thing to do
— Andy (@andycasso96) May 10, 2017
https://twitter.com/Corbynator2/status/861963715817730048
4. But some don’t believe it can be done
https://twitter.com/JamesTobin97/status/864147800900030464
We must remember that it was Labour who introduced tuition fees. What they say and what they do are never the same two things
— Rt Hon Nadine Dorries (@NadineDorries) May 11, 2017
5. Academics say it is the only way to save social mobility
More than 2,000 academics have signed this letter commending @UKLabour's commitment to abolish tuition fees https://t.co/KihDK3P8px
— Shelly Asquith (@ShellyAsquith) May 12, 2017
6. Some are less generous – If I had it tough, so should you
Vote for labour? No chance. If I paid for uni so will you
— drama (@eyesonshen) May 10, 2017
https://twitter.com/PaddyVogel/status/861942390357200897
7. Maybe the middle ground would be better?
https://twitter.com/Mvnkoe/status/862354510466998274
8. A comparison to the Tories was inevitable
Labour: Free school meals, free hospital parking, no tax increase for 95%, abolition of tuition fees
Conservatives:https://t.co/laIA7aq79i
— David Lynch (@dmlynchlfc) May 9, 2017
https://twitter.com/brewster1994/status/861698526782402560
9. As well as some reminders on important history (Labour’s flip-flop, Corbyn’s [lack of] flip-flop)
https://twitter.com/abigailmaxkay1/status/861837460749340672
https://twitter.com/headrevolution/status/864394271838937088
https://twitter.com/lamzyco/status/864192789134934017
You are joking? LibDems lecturing on TUITION FEES?! FYI, Corbyn opposed introducing fees, opposed raising them and wants to scrap them. https://t.co/gPwBjIheBU
— George Aylett (@GeorgeAylett) May 14, 2017
10. Regardless, it is hard to deny the proposal’s popularity
Humongous Hint from Jeremy Corbyn on Tuition Fees…… Get ready to be very fecking excited. pic.twitter.com/j1wDl3lv6N
— Tory Fibs (@ToryFibs) May 10, 2017
https://twitter.com/JaneAitchison/status/621562323145199616
Watch this space as we follow the general election and see what the future holds for students in the UK!
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