I shall skip over the clumsy handling
of student tuition fees, the attacks on welfare and the introduction of secret courts, important though these are.
Vince Cable resorted to a motoring metaphor to justify tearing up his party's election pledges
on student tuition fees.
In the tough bargaining around the 2010 spending round, I managed to ease some of the political pain of
increasing student tuition fees by channelling more resources into apprenticeships.
On education, the Green party proposes to
abolish student tuition fees, Sats tests and scale back class sizes by splurging # 500m on additional teaching staff.
But according to Anita Zaenker, national executive representative of the BC chapter of the Canadian Federation of Students (CFS), this is not enough to compete with the troubling trend of rising
graduate student tuition fees.
The Social Liberal Forum now calls upon Dr. Cable, and all Liberal Democrat MPs, to continue to press for a system that ensures the abolition
of student tuition fees, the reduction of student debt and their replacement with a graduate contribution, varying progressively with income and set at levels which do not deter students from taking less well paid, but socially beneficial, post-graduate employment.
It is one thing to vote against your own manifesto (as the Lib Dems did
on student tuition fees) when your coalition partner will not budge.
In a seat with a high student population she resigned as parliamentary private secretary to Chris Huhne in order to rebel against
increasing student tuition fees.
Student tuition fees, dental check - ups, eye tests, school meals, road and bridge tolls even access to life saving drugs.
I therefore request that you press for a system that ensures the abolition of
student tuition fees, the reduction of student debt and their replacement with a graduate contribution, varying progressively with income and set at levels which do not deter students from taking less well paid, but socially beneficial, post-graduate employment.
[90] Among the policies she supported were renationalisation of the railways, introducing free childcare for children over the age of twelve months, introducing a living wage, and the abolition of both the Trident programme and
student tuition fees.
Euan Smith led the advice to Universities UK on the legal implications of the UK's departure from the EU on the level of
student tuition fees and the availability of student loans.