The Conservative Party conference brought frustration over ministers âgrandstandingâ by attacking English universities rather than seeing them as drivers of growth, while big questions on funding remain unresolved and planned entry restrictions are tipped to be dropped by the Truss government.
A Tory conference fringe event on Brexit saw the skills minister, Andrea Jenkyns, claim that universities offer âanti-British history and sociological Marxismâ, while the home secretary, Suella Braverman, pledged action on visas for students and dependants because âtoo many students [are] coming into this country who are propping upâŠsubstandard courses in inadequate institutionsâ.
Although Liz Truss has pledged that her government will be âunashamedly pro-growthâ, that vision remains focused on tax cuts and deregulation rather than encompassing the roles of universities.
Sir Chris Husbands, vice-chancellor of Sheffield Hallam University, said it was âobviously extremely disappointing that at a party conference people think thereâs mileage to be had in grandstanding with ideas about courses, access and studentsâ.
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âThe facts are that UK higher education is a major export industry, a major driver of growth and a major resource for UK soft power,â he said.
Lord Willetts, the Conservative former universities minister, argued that Ms Jenkynsâ role at a University of Bolton thinktank had given her understanding of âdiversity of provisionâ and that her comments did not âreflect her approach to HE from my conversations with her over the yearsâ.
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But on student visas, he said, âbeing realistic, it is possible we will now get a slight reversionâ after the âwonderful liberalisationâ under the Johnson government: âIÂ would attach a bit more weight to Suellaâs comments than Andreaâs,â Lord Willetts said.
Diana Beech, chief executive of London Higher and former adviser to Conservative universities ministers, noted that in contrast to Ms Braverman, Ms Jenkyns spoke of international educationâs value to the UK. A âconsistent frameworkâ across government would take time to emerge, involving compromise in Whitehall, âand who wins will only become clear as the new government beds downâ, she said.
There was also âan element of playing to the core membershipâ at party conferences, she added, âso whatever is said [at conference] is not necessarily going to be translated into policy, as officials in Whitehall play a key role in setting out options for ministers and mitigating risksâ.
Meanwhile, intentions to set minimum entry requirements and student number controls to tackle âlow valueâ courses, where the Johnson government had planned legislation, might not survive the exits of former higher education minister Michelle Donelan and her adviser Iain Mansfield from the Department for Education. No bill had been drafted before their departures.
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This plan, said Dr Beech, was âprobably off the agenda â if only because this government is going to have to prioritise what is deliverable within the next 18 monthsâ before the next general election and âwithout legislation drafted, HE reform is going to be timed outâ.
The Lifelong Loan Entitlement, a Johnson government plan with major sector implications, is included in the list of Ms Jenkynsâ ministerial responsibilities and its architect, Baroness Wolf, remains skills and workforce adviser in the No 10 Policy Unit.
The future of teaching funding and research funding â where the Truss government is tipped to reverse Johnson government investment pledges as it seeks big savings â remains a major concern.
âThere are some big decisions needed about HE policy, and if they arenât taken, the sector will drift,â said Sir Chris. âThereâs a responsibility on the sector to engage with government, but a responsibility on the governing party to nurture a major national asset.â
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