Political prisoner, activist, journalist, hymn-writer, emerging thinktanker, aspiring novelist, "tribal elder", 2019 parliamentary candidate for North West Durham, Shadow Leader of the Opposition, "Speedboat", "The Cockroach", eagerly awaiting the second (or possibly third) attempt to murder me.
Monday, 27 April 2009
Equality Audit
That rules out Georgia Gould and the entire Shadow Cabinet, for a start.
Oh, I know what it'll say: yet more help for the privately educated daughter of two Asian doctors over the state eeducated son of a white bus driver and a white shop assistant. That's what these things always say.
As I said, it wouldn't take long. After all, who has to wait five years before being given a seat? Only someone who was never going to be given one, anyway. I mean, by then, you'd be what? 26? TWENTY-SIX? Imagine!
One more non-student election that she's ever contested, never mind won.
It's hardly comparable in all sorts of ways. Including the fact that there were then, as there are now, 15 members of Lanchester Parish Council. And the rest of them certainly weren't 21, let me assure you.
All things being equal, I'd agree that a 22-year-old is unlikely to have the qualities required of a good MP - but then, plenty of MPs don't have the qualities required of a good MP, so it seems a bit of a shame to focus on the age of one particular would-be candidate. This is the best commentary I've seen on the issue.
Oh, against the grammar school boys in those days, yes. To have made it to Oxford from a public school was actually quite an achievement in the days of the grammar schools.
David's right - in the 1940s it was vanishingly difficult for the public-school educated heirs to the peerage to get a place at Oxbridge. The number of public-school educated heirs to the peerage studying at Oxbridge in the 1940s probably never got out of double figures.
Pitt was one of Britain's greatest ever PMs! Don't listen to the Fox/North propaganda, join our Facebook page and find out the truth about the pint-sized political dynamo!
Women would be ruder about her. Indeed, they are. Since they can be. Which must be nice.
The grammar schools dominated Oxbridge. Until comprehensivisation, most boys' private schools concentrated on preparation for the City or the Officer Corps, neither of which cared about degrees in those days. And most girls' private schools taught nothing, really.
But then, many of what are now private schools WERE grammar schools. And would be again, if they could be.
Leave it. You may type like that, but if you have ever heard of these people then you are not fooling anyone that you really are of the rising political generation.
Or, indeed, of the established one. Has, say, James Purnell, or George Osborne, ever heard of them? I think we know the answer to that one.
Polin, I never said it was a bar. I said that most Oxbridge places went to the grammar schools when there were grammar schools. As they did.
"I never said it was a bar."You said that "To have made it to Oxford from a public school was actually quite an achievement in the days of the grammar schools". That implies to me that you think public school was a disadvantage in Oxford applications. Otherwise, why mention it?
It was a disadvantage, of sorts. The grammar schools were much more academic insititutions than most of the fee-chargers. And a simple look at admissions proves the point: most were from the grammar schools. That persisted until the grammar schools were abolished.
Although you are essentially right. Yes, Pitt The Younger was Prime Minister very young. But he wasn't terribly good. And he wasn't as good as his father.
Oxford and Cambridge themselves could doubtless give you chapter and verse. It may even be on the Net by now.
And anyway, just think about that generation of the great and the good, about who they were and where they came from. The grammar schools sent them to Oxbridge, and the rest is history.
To those trying to post spoiler comments about the Seventies and Eighties, do you know when comprehensivisation happened? Can you name the Education Secretary who closed so many that there were not enough left at the end for her record ever to be equalled? Why are you so keen on the archetypal Thatcher policy?
No one under 50 except you believes me when I tell them this, but it is true. Oxford and Cambridge were state school universities in the days of state grammar schools. Anyone of my generation can remember that. You might as well ask for the statistics on how brown or grey the clothes used to be. We can remember it. Things were just like that then, simple as that.
Although Oxford and Cambridge doubtless have them.
Honestly, I have never before come across ANYONE who disputed the old grammar school domination of Oxbridge. Even the most militant comprehensive campaigners say that it is the wrong question (whereas in fact Oxbridge has worsened as the abolition of the grammar schools has narrowed its social base - that is the problem with it).
But even they don't dispute what the answer to that question is. That's why they don't like the question. Anyone who does so dispute simply doesn't know what they are talking about.
Rules them out in what sense? It appears you haven't looked at what the Equality Bill says.
ReplyDeleteOh, I know what it'll say: yet more help for the privately educated daughter of two Asian doctors over the state eeducated son of a white bus driver and a white shop assistant. That's what these things always say.
ReplyDeleteThey should audit how many PPCs selected for next year had paid jobs in the five years after graduating.
ReplyDeleteThat wouldn't take very long.
ReplyDeleteFive years after graduating?
ReplyDeleteAs I said, it wouldn't take long. After all, who has to wait five years before being given a seat? Only someone who was never going to be given one, anyway. I mean, by then, you'd be what? 26? TWENTY-SIX? Imagine!
ReplyDeleteYou were 21 when you were first a Parish Councillor.
ReplyDeleteOne more non-student election that she's ever contested, never mind won.
ReplyDeleteIt's hardly comparable in all sorts of ways. Including the fact that there were then, as there are now, 15 members of Lanchester Parish Council. And the rest of them certainly weren't 21, let me assure you.
So?
ReplyDeleteThere is only one MP for Erith and Thamesmead.
ReplyDeleteThere are 646 MPs altogether.
ReplyDeleteYes, but only one of them sits for Erith and Thamesmead. That is the point.
ReplyDeleteBeing an MP is simply no job for someone straight out of university at the normal age.
All things being equal, I'd agree that a 22-year-old is unlikely to have the qualities required of a good MP - but then, plenty of MPs don't have the qualities required of a good MP, so it seems a bit of a shame to focus on the age of one particular would-be candidate. This is the best commentary I've seen on the issue.
ReplyDeleteAt least Benn was selected fair and square. Like his granddaughter, presumably. The ballot wasn't rigged.
ReplyDeleteAnd he'd fought in the War, in the RAF. Gould has never fought for so much as her place at Oxford.
And Benn did?
ReplyDeleteOh, against the grammar school boys in those days, yes. To have made it to Oxford from a public school was actually quite an achievement in the days of the grammar schools.
ReplyDelete"Being an MP is simply no job for someone straight out of university at the normal age."
ReplyDeleteDamn right. I mean, just look at Pitt the Younger.
Do.
ReplyDeleteDon't focus on the Benn stuff (although I think it's a salutary point) - read the rest of the article.
ReplyDeleteThey are really annooyed by the fuss over this.
ReplyDeleteDamn right. They cannot believe that anyone dare object to their behaving like this. Or, indeed, in absolutely any other way that they see fit.
ReplyDeletePitt The Younger? I ask you! She even LOOKS like some silly little rah tart. And she certainly has the attitude of one.
David's right - in the 1940s it was vanishingly difficult for the public-school educated heirs to the peerage to get a place at Oxbridge. The number of public-school educated heirs to the peerage studying at Oxbridge in the 1940s probably never got out of double figures.
ReplyDeleteStill after the women's vote, are we David?
ReplyDeletePitt was one of Britain's greatest ever PMs! Don't listen to the Fox/North propaganda, join our Facebook page and find out the truth about the pint-sized political dynamo!
ReplyDeleteWomen would be ruder about her. Indeed, they are. Since they can be. Which must be nice.
ReplyDeleteThe grammar schools dominated Oxbridge. Until comprehensivisation, most boys' private schools concentrated on preparation for the City or the Officer Corps, neither of which cared about degrees in those days. And most girls' private schools taught nothing, really.
But then, many of what are now private schools WERE grammar schools. And would be again, if they could be.
If you think that I am scouring Facebook for The William Pitt The Younger Appreciation Society, then you have...
ReplyDeleteMy grandfather went to Cambridge in the 1940s, after public school and the Royal Navy.
ReplyDeleteGood for him. He will have met a very diverse bunch of people, both in the Navy and at Cambridge.
ReplyDeleteI'm sure he did. My point is that public school was no bar to getting into Cambridge.
ReplyDeleteHe wasn't the heir to a peerage, though.
PtY sucked! Couldn't even defeat some upstart colonials - if you want real radical 18th Century statesmanship, check out the Fox/North posse!
ReplyDeleteLeave it. You may type like that, but if you have ever heard of these people then you are not fooling anyone that you really are of the rising political generation.
ReplyDeleteOr, indeed, of the established one. Has, say, James Purnell, or George Osborne, ever heard of them? I think we know the answer to that one.
Polin, I never said it was a bar. I said that most Oxbridge places went to the grammar schools when there were grammar schools. As they did.
"I never said it was a bar."You said that "To have made it to Oxford from a public school was actually quite an achievement in the days of the grammar schools". That implies to me that you think public school was a disadvantage in Oxford applications. Otherwise, why mention it?
ReplyDeleteIt was a disadvantage, of sorts. The grammar schools were much more academic insititutions than most of the fee-chargers. And a simple look at admissions proves the point: most were from the grammar schools. That persisted until the grammar schools were abolished.
ReplyDeletePtY may have been good looking, but he was a boy trying to do a man's work. Pitt the Elder was a real man. Respect your Elders! Age before booty!
ReplyDeleteI won't tell you again, leave it.
ReplyDeleteAlthough you are essentially right. Yes, Pitt The Younger was Prime Minister very young. But he wasn't terribly good. And he wasn't as good as his father.
That's very interesting, David - can you point me towards the data on 1940s Oxbridge admissions from grammar schools and public schools?
ReplyDeleteOxford and Cambridge themselves could doubtless give you chapter and verse. It may even be on the Net by now.
ReplyDeleteAnd anyway, just think about that generation of the great and the good, about who they were and where they came from. The grammar schools sent them to Oxbridge, and the rest is history.
To those trying to post spoiler comments about the Seventies and Eighties, do you know when comprehensivisation happened? Can you name the Education Secretary who closed so many that there were not enough left at the end for her record ever to be equalled? Why are you so keen on the archetypal Thatcher policy?
So many what?
ReplyDeleteSo many grammar schools.
ReplyDeleteThought so.
ReplyDeleteAnd you're right of course. Just ask anyone who was at Oxbridge in the grammar school days. They were state school universities.
No one under 50 except you believes me when I tell them this, but it is true. Oxford and Cambridge were state school universities in the days of state grammar schools. Anyone of my generation can remember that. You might as well ask for the statistics on how brown or grey the clothes used to be. We can remember it. Things were just like that then, simple as that.
ReplyDeleteQ, yes indeed, but in this case the statistics will certainly exist, so I can only assume David has seen them. I was just wondering where he saw them.
ReplyDeleteWho needs them?
ReplyDeleteQuite.
ReplyDeleteAlthough Oxford and Cambridge doubtless have them.
Honestly, I have never before come across ANYONE who disputed the old grammar school domination of Oxbridge. Even the most militant comprehensive campaigners say that it is the wrong question (whereas in fact Oxbridge has worsened as the abolition of the grammar schools has narrowed its social base - that is the problem with it).
But even they don't dispute what the answer to that question is. That's why they don't like the question. Anyone who does so dispute simply doesn't know what they are talking about.