Education secretary ‘to consider options’ including repeal of controversial powers introduced by last government
Only days before it was due to come into force, the education secretary said she had decided to “stop further commencement of the Higher Education (Freedom of Speech) Act 2023, in order to consider options, including its repeal”.
Bridget Phillipson also announced major changes to the work of the higher education regulator in England, the Office for Students (OfS), in order to prioritise financial stability in the sector, as many universities struggle in the face of a mounting financial crisis.
The legislation, which faced bitter opposition from the point of its inception, required universities and student unions to take “reasonable steps” to promote free speech, or face sanctions by the regulator including possible fines.
Phillipson said the legislation was not fit for purpose and risked imposing heavy burdens on institutions. “For too long, universities have been a political battlefield and treated with contempt, rather than as a public good, distracting people from the core issues they face.”
She said the government remained “absolutely committed” to freedom of speech and academic freedom, adding: “This legislation could expose students to harm and appalling hate speech on campuses.
“That is why I have quickly ordered this legislation to be stopped so that we can take a view on next steps and protect everyone’s best interests, working closely with a refocussed OfS.”
Phillipson’s decision was welcomed by many in the sector who disputed the previous government’s narrative of a freedom of speech crisis in universities, and its claims that “cancel culture” and “no platforming” were undermining academic freedom. In sharp contrast to Tory claims, a survey of students by the OfS last year found nearly nine in 10 students in England felt free to express their opinions and beliefs.
The education secretary’s announcement coincided with the publication of an independent review of the OfS that concluded the regulator must reduce its strategic objectives to focus on monitoring financial sustainability in the sector, while also ensuring quality, protecting public money and regulating in the interests of students.
The lead reviewer, Sir David Behan, who was formerly the head of the Care Quality Commission, was also confirmed as the new interim chair of the OfS after the departure earlier this month of James Wharton, a former Conservative MP who ran Boris Johnson’s Tory leadership campaign in 2019.
She said the government remained “absolutely committed” to freedom of speech and academic freedom, adding: “This legislation could expose students to harm and appalling hate speech on campuses.
Complete tautology. It is not in a students interest to be protected from the world. Not in a university.
This may not have been the correct instrument, but universities shouldn't be scared of debating the less acceptable viewpoints in society. Understanding why, for example, Trump or Farage, gets traction with a segment of society means you need to listen to that segment. If we isolate our best and brightest from it we will never solve the problems.
If you think that forcing students to give a platform to the EDL is going to improve civil discourse, perhaps you need to think that through a bit more. The legislation was a troll's charter. It was never about free speech, it was about the ruling party controlling discourse within the universities.
You don't have to treat ideas as valid just because they exist. Study them, sure, but students don't owe you a debate on whether women should have rights or black people are inherently criminal. There is no reason to expose them to such hate just you can say it's been fairly debated like all opinions are equal.
If you're interested in self defence you might go to a martial arts class. In that class you'll sometimes play the role of the attacker and sometimes the defender. Trouble is, no one in that class is a real attacker. Everybody in that class is being taught to play that role in the same way. The self defence that you're all learning works against the attacks in the class, but does it work against someone who hasn't been taught to attack in a certain way?
A big part of the rise of the right currently is that the left has been insulating itself from real challenges, and now can't argue effectively for what it believes is right. It can preach to the choir but not convince others. IMHO it should win confrontation easily, but fails with the general public.
But ultimately the Tories bill had nothing to do with protecting free speech. It's purpose was simply to give unpopular, right wing speakers a universal defense to enforce themselves on universities, and to continue the perverse idea that a party who had already been in power for 8 years was somehow being persecuted and oppressed.
Before this bill, Universities could still book anyone they want, and equally sections of the students can choose to protest against the speaker. The organisers could choose whether to ignore the protest, or otherwise. If they decided to remove the speaker - for example, because of past comments unknown to the organiser at the time - that's their choice.
No organisation is required to give anyone a platform, and any invitation can be revoked.