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On a more political level, the higher education bill will be voted on tonight- It if passes, those of us who plan on going to uni will end up being more so in debt and have to pay in advance too. If it isn't passed then we will not be as much in debt, but some universities will be shut down due to lack of funding - and some subjects such as medicine will be underfunded and have a lack of resources.
Labour want to put the bill through, but the conversatives dont, and nobody invited the Lib Dems to the conference.
The vote is at 7pm, and results will be accounced at about 8 I think.
Personally I hope it doesn't pass, but the labour argument seems to be strong, and they have more seats than the conservatives. The only real way the bill cannot pass is if all the conservatives vote against the bill, and a fair share of the labour MPs vote against their own bill too.
On a more political level, the higher education bill will be voted on tonight- It if passes, those of us who plan on going to uni will end up being more so in debt and have to pay in advance too. If it isn't passed then we will not be as much in debt, but some universities will be shut down due to lack of funding - and some subjects such as medicine will be underfunded and have a lack of resources.
Labour want to put the bill through, but the conversatives dont, and nobody invited the Lib Dems to the conference.
The vote is at 7pm, and results will be accounced at about 8 I think.
Personally I hope it doesn't pass, but the labour argument seems to be strong, and they have more seats than the conservatives. The only real way the bill cannot pass is if all the conservatives vote against the bill, and a fair share of the labour MPs vote against their own bill too.
Be loyal to your party's leader or be loyal to your conscience and electorate.
They folded on foundation hospitals, realistically I expect them to fold again - enough of them at least. But there's always hope. Well, not always, but for another hour or so :^)
Hmm, the guy arguing the case for is mentioning some incentives for the poor that I've never heard of before. To be fair, the top up fees will be hurting the middle class the most, not the poor.
Under this system I leave uni with a debt of around 10K, under the new one it would be 15K (I worked it out). So tell me anyone, how would anyone in the same situation as me be better off? Because they are £5000 down. Hmmm
Celebrate children, Mr Blair just sold your higher education out...
This country well and truly sucks.
(and my mum said that, an' she's always roit)