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Tim Farron pledges to block any Tory attempt to create grammar schools

August 7, 2016 5:52 PM
By Peter Walker in The Guardian
Originally published by South Lincolnshire Liberal Democrats

Tim Farron in WhitehallParty leader says it is likely Lib Dem peers would have sufficient crossbench support to see off any effort to overturn 1998 law

The Liberal Democrat leader, Tim Farron, has promised that his party will seek to block any government attempt to create new grammar schools, arguing that these are "not the drivers of social mobility" their proponents claim.

Amid speculation that Theresa May's government might attempt to overturn a 1998 law preventing new grammar schools in England, Farron pledged that Lib Dem peers would block any such attempt in the Lords.

The party has 106 peers and is confident that there would be sufficient Labour and crossbench support to indefinitely see off the Conservative tally of 243. Farron said: "The government cannot and will not win on this."

Grammars, which select the most academically high-performing pupils with an examination at the age of 11, are one of the most contentious areas of British schooling.

Proponents argue that the huge postwar expansion of grammar schools prompted a social mobility revolution, helping huge numbers of children from deprived backgrounds to go to university and then thrive in professional careers. However, the evidence for this apparent effect is largely lacking, with opponents arguing that most of the social mobility of the 1950s and 1960s was driven by a general expansion in white-collar jobs, while the intake of modern grammar schools is disproportionately middle class.

"The Liberal Democrats are the party of education, and that means we believe in an excellent education for all, so any plans to bring in more divisive grammar schools will be utterly opposed by my party," Farron said, noting that a return to grammars was not in the Conservatives' 2015 manifesto.

"Those who hold up grammar schools as the gold standard are less keen to talk about what happens to those children who, at the age of 11, are told they are not good enough. What does that do to a young person's confidence and self esteem?

"This rose-tinted view of grammar schools might play well for a nostalgic few on the right of the Tory party but make no mistake about it - they are not the drivers of social mobility they would like to claim."