Sent to the Herald: 19th December 2007. Not Published
Sir
Richard Baker comes up with many reasons for not supporting the Graduate Endowment Abolition Bill (letters, 19th December), but the main reason he seems likely to vote against it on Thursday (20th Dec) is simply because it has been proposed by the Scottish National Party.
He is not the first, and unlikely to be the last, former leader of the NUS to sell out on the principles he once campaigned for at the first whiff of a parliamentary career.
The SNP Government has, for some strange reason, been given the tightest budget settlement since devolution. This is one reason why John Swinney has freely admitted that the Government is unable – at present – to write off student debt. There is also the small matter of no wider parliamentary support – there is no sign of willingness on the part of New
Labour to support such a move were it brough forward, despite their hysterical condemnation of the present situation. In these circumstances, abolition of the Graduate Endowment is a welcome first move.
No doubt all the self-proclaimed socialists and former student radicals on the New Labour benches will find a way of convincing themselves that voting with the Conservatives against the principle of free education is the right thing to do. Whether or not they are able to convince Scotland’s students is another matter.
Yours etc