Source: Getty
Vive la r矇volution: student protests in Canada that led to the downfall of a government have inspired some NUS members
The student protest to be held in London next week by the National Union of Students is one that its leadership never wanted.
Union leaders feared that violence could damage the NUS standing among voters in the next general election, when unseating deputy prime minister Nick Clegg from his Sheffield Hallam constituency is among the unions aims.
But the student Left, inspired by the anti-fees protests in Quebec that led to the downfall of the provincial government, is relishing the prospect of the demo on 21 November.
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The event was backed by delegates at the NUS conference in April despite the leaderships opposition. The unions national executive committee then voted down leaders proposals to subsume the demo in the Trades Union Congress anti-cuts protest, held last month.
At a meeting of the NUS executive committee in July, Liam Burns, the unions president, did not hide his unhappiness, saying: I still believe this to have been the wrong decision but it is fair to say that I havent seen any great kickback from membership.
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Asked if he was concerned by the possibility of violence on the demo, Mr Burns said: Yes, its a worry. Thats why Ive been so clear with members that this [violence] is not the way that youll engender public sympathy so they vote along our lines at the general election.
However, Mr Burns believes the demo is now right and noted its potential to create more politicised students union officers.
He added that it was a starter gun for what well talk about in the general election. Among its aims, the union wants to unseat if not all, then key Liberal Democrat MPs, including Mr Clegg, who backed the NUS pledge at the 2010 election to oppose higher fees and then broke it after forming the coalition.
He said he was glad not to hear of any vice-chancellors criticising the demo, adding that if he did he would have to ask what they were doing to help. It simply isnt enough for universities to go into the next general election calling for research funding to be protected. The public value of higher education needs to be put firmly back on the agenda and to do that we need to work together.
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Mr Burns argued that the NUS leadership and the majority of students unions are as one on the slogan for the march - Educate, Employ, Empower - and in agreement over its route, which will avoid Millbank, home to Conservative Party HQ, which was vandalised by some protesters who broke away from the NUS demonstration against higher fees in November 2010.
But the National Campaign Against Fees and Cuts will be holding a feeder march on 21 November under an alternative slogan: Tax the rich to fund education.
Michael Chessum, NCAFC co-founder and a member of the NUS executive committee, said that this reflected the unions policy for free education funded through general taxation - a change from its previous graduate tax policy, voted through at this years conference.
He also criticised the route of the main march, which ends next to The Oval cricket ground in South London. The 2010 protests led to the greatest upsurge in [UK] student activism圯ver and that wouldnt have happened without Millbank, said Mr Chessum, elected last week as president of the University of London Union.
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He said the lesson of Classe, the Qu矇b矇cois student group, was that persistent street mobilisation圯ventually won.
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