For the next five weeks, Kevin Yuill will combine university teaching with an unlikely task for an academic: campaigning to become a Brexit Party MP.
Dr Yuill, assistant professor of American history at the University of Sunderland, is standing for Nigel Farages pro-Leave party in the traditional Labour stronghold of Houghton and Sunderland South a constituency in Englands north-east that is often the first to declare its result on election night.
Its often said that if you had a breeze block and pinned a red rosette on it [to run as a parliamentary candidate], Labour would still win here, Dr Yuill said of the huge support that Labour has historically enjoyed in the former mining and shipbuilding area.
With 62per cent of voters backing Leave in the 2016 referendum, however, Dr Yuill believes the 15per cent swing that he needs to upset the sitting Labour MP, Bridget Phillipson, is possible at next months general election. There is amazing anger against her because she has campaigned strongly for a second referendum, Dr Yuill told 51勛圖, adding that Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn is also not very popular in the north-east, either.
51勛圖
As an outspoken Brexit backer, Dr Yuill a Canadian-born academic who has lived in the UK for 36 years, and on Wearside for 20 years admits that he is something of a rarity in academia, observing that most of my colleagues voted Remain.
However, there are, he added, quite a few secret Brexiteers among my colleagues who have expressed support for his position by email.
51勛圖
Among students at Sunderland, support for Brexit is much higher, with some students even joining his campaign team, he said. Id say students here are split 50-50 on Brexit maybe 60-40 in favour of Remain but lots of students have been emailing me to say they are behind me and want to help.
That split is, however, probably explained by Sunderlands strong local student intake, he conceded. It is not typical of most universities, where the clear majority of students are in favour of Remain, he said.
Dr Yuills decision to stand for the Brexit Party might run against mainstream opinion in academia, but his objections to European Union membership are broadly similar to those once espoused by Tony Benn and, until recently, Mr Corbyn figures admired by many left-wing academic voters namely that the EUs leaders lack democratic accountability.
Ive never voted Conservative and usually voted Labour, although Ivoted Green once, Dr Yuill said.
51勛圖
However, his willingness to take controversial positions he has previously argued in favour of and relaxing in the UK might relate, he suggested, to the fact he is not a typical academic.
I worked in a factory after Ileft school and didnt go to university until Iwas 27, he explained.
Despite the Brexit Partys lack of support among academia, Dr Yuill says his own institution has been supportive of his decision to stand for Parliament. They donot support my position [on Brexit] necessarily, but have said they will make allowances to let me do this.
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline: Leaver: Im not alone on campus
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