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Nick Cohen
Wednesday 19th May 2010
Anyone But Balls (1)

The first in what will be a long-running series on why the Labour Party should elect anyone other than Ed Balls.

 

1.     Does Britain really need three public-school party leaders?

 There is no area of life in which English hypocrisy is on more gorgeous display than in education. The combination of an egalitarian state system and a selective private system is a rich parent's dream. If his children are bright he can pay for them to go private. If they are dim, he can still use his money to secure advantage by paying to move into the catchment area of a good comprehensive.

It ought to be clear in retrospect that the abolition of the grammars was the biggest favour Labour did to the rich in the 20th century because it knocked out schools which produced pupils who could compete with wealthy children.

 To make matters worse, a view has taken hold among leftish educationalists, that anything which helps bright state school kids is "elitist" and must be stopped.

 

In my Observer column on Sunday,  I quote a Labour minister

 

The left cannot be too preachy, however, and it must accept its responsibility for once. Since Labour began the abolition of the grammar schools, a politically correct bodyguard of pseudo-egalitarians has protected the rise of the new ruling class. Former ministers told me how when they tried to introduce programmes to allow the clever children of the working and middle classes to thrive, teaching unions and Department for Education civil servants, who ministers knew sent their own children to private and grammar schools, damned them for their "elitism". It was as if the headmaster of Eton had bribed leftish educationalists to nobble the competition.

 

All of my minister's programmes were then wound down by Ed Balls when he became education secretary. Balls is a former pupil of Nottingham High School, one of England's leading private schools with fees of nearly £9,000 a year. Now I'm sure he did not think to himself that he must do everything possible to stop working and middle class children competing with his class. Doubtless he dressed his actions up in the language of egalitarianism. But the effect was to reinforce the advantages of private schools. As the Sutton Trust has documented, in politics, the media, law and academia the former pupils of private schools are everywhere in ascendant. The great change of the last 30 years has been to wipe out the advances in social mobility.

You can see this most clearly in politics.

Nick Clegg is the son of a rich man who sent him to Westminster.

David Cameron is the son of a rich man who sent him to Eton.

George Osborne is the son a rich man who sent him to St Pauls.

David Laws is the son of a rich man who sent him to St George's College.

Chris Huhne is the son of a rich man who sent him to Westminster.

Oliver Letwin is the son of a rich man who sent him to Eton

 If Labour elects Ed Balls we will have yet another son of a rich man at the top of politics. Cannot the 93 per cent of people in this country who did not go to a private school be represented at the top of politics? 

 

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PSJ
May 21st, 2010
11:05 AM
I really, really don't care where his parents sent him to school decades ago. I think Balls would be a disastrous leader because he has no judgement and no public appeal, not because of his educational history.

Nash
May 21st, 2010
11:05 AM
Tim Footman misses the point. Whether or not Nottingham High is third-tier - fifth-tier or tenth-tier, it taught Ed Balls how to read, write and do arithmetic which gave him a real advantage over people who went to the majority of State schools and why State School pupils have a hard time competing in the "real" world.

Sprog
May 21st, 2010
11:05 AM
One of my teenage sons thought that Labour was the "posh peoples party" The other son is at University. He is one of only 2 Tory supporters in his block. They are also the only 2 to have had a state education. Why should Labour have a problem with Balls private education?

Mike Jecks
May 21st, 2010
11:05 AM
I rather think that you are stuck with public school leaders for a while. Since the "elitism" which was enforced from the 70s onwards more or less destroyed education for the poor, the only people who have any sort of political education are those who attended public schools. What we really need now is the abolition of the national curriculum, which stifles good teaching and good students by forcing them to undergo a treadmill of examinations - not an education. Second, devolve all control of education to local authorities and take the Westminster politics and civil service out completely. Third, equalise all spending on schools and children. Here in Devon the education system is utterly impoverished because we get almost the lowest spend per child of any council in the country. Probably because we tend not to vote Labour and are being punished. Fourth, continue to stream kids based solely on ability. Our politicians prefer money and nepotism as steps to power (Mandleson, Millibands, Balls, Blair - all of them wealthy and with superb education - there are many more) but what the country needs is the best minds to go to politics, industry, education - everywhere. We are falling behind in international leagues purely because our kids aren't being given the education they deserve. It is shameful that in a mere forty years our education system has been centralised, neutralised, and all but eradicated.

It's all balls
May 21st, 2010
11:05 AM
Balls for Labour leader PLEASE!!! It is what they deserve.

Andrew Old
May 20th, 2010
6:05 PM
I can't say that I agree that either grammar schools or the "gifted and talented" programmes were any help to able children from disadvantaged backgrounds. However, I can agree that Ed Balls' policies, which seemed to centre on dumbing down and stopping teachers from teaching certainly harmed their chances. People reading this might be interested in the "Anybody But Ed Balls for Labour Leader" Facebook group: http://www.facebook.com/home.php?ref=home#!/group.php?gid=122032747824585

Charlie
May 20th, 2010
5:05 PM
Nick, this inequality is not due to comprehensives but what is taught in state schools; the method of teaching and the lack of aspiration by many teachers for their pupils. Low level disruption; lack of dicipline, lack of excellence, lack of high quality extra curricula activties such as sport, music, drama; lack of guidance on subjects to take for public exams in order to enter professions , etc etc has al reduced social mobility. Ken Livingstone and the ILEa has done more to enourage parents to pay school fees, move out of the city or to a catchment of a good state school than practically anyting.

Laura Marcus
May 20th, 2010
3:05 PM
I get so tired of the bleating about sacrifices made by those who send their kids to private schools. As Nick says in his piece, only seven per cent of parents can afford to do this. No matter how many foreign holidays you go without, most parents can't afford private school fees and period.

Dave Weeden
May 19th, 2010
9:05 PM
Don't believe anyone who tells you that the first sign of madness is talking to oneself. It's clearly writing successive comments to blog posts. Mea culpa: I was quite wrong about Balls getting any kind of scholarship. John Rentoul interviewed him for GQ and wrote about him on his blog. http://johnrentoul.independentminds.livejournal.com/21149.html Worse was to come, from Gibson’s point of view, because, when the Balls family moved to Nottingham, Ed went to a private secondary school, Nottingham High School. This involved some financial sacrifice. Ed’s father was on an academic’s salary, and Ed’s sister, two years younger than him, and brother, seven years younger, were also educated privately. To help pay the fees Ed’s mother Carolyn took a job at the Queen’s Hospital Medical School in the pharmacy stores. It seems that she was keener on private education than her husband: “She thought it was the right thing to do,” I am told. The family could not afford foreign holidays; the first time Ed went abroad was when he was 18, and his first time in an aeroplane was when he was 21. Richer than most, yes. Rich? I'd say not. Michael Balls did teach at Eton for a year, so Ed lived there. Doubtless you can use that in the second edition of 'Waiting for the Etonians.'

Dave Weeden
May 19th, 2010
8:05 PM
I'm not a fan of Balls, but you're doing your best to change my mind. His father, Michael Balls, is an academic and medical researcher. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Balls OK, medical researchers can earn a lot more than other academics. Among other achievements, " In 1997, he won the fourth SmithKline Beecham Laboratory Animal Welfare Prize for outstanding contributions to the welfare of laboratory animals." There may have been money attached to this award, but Ed was 30 at the time, so it seems unlikely to me that the money from this contributed to his schooling. I haven't yet come across any references to patents of other royalty generating work which would make Professor Balls much better off than other professors - such as your friend Norman Geras, for example. Michael Balls was "chairman of the Labour party’s local ward and his youthful son became a party member and the ward’s education officer." http://www.economicsuk.com/blog/000133.html There have been rich men who have been members of the Labour Party - Robert Maxwell springs to mind - but surely this is unusual? I haven't seen any references to whether Ed Balls received any kind of scholarship, though he was obviously an academic child with ambitious and academic parents. On the other hand, I doubt you have proof that he didn't. Anyway, are scientists the class enemy now? I thought you were in favour of Enlightenment values. Finally, I'm no fan of Balls either. But this is simply a terrible argument.

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About Nick Cohen

Nick Cohen is a columnist for the Observer. You Can't Read This Book, his account of modern censorship, will be published this month by encounter. 

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