-
More
Campaigns Student Transport - Tell us your stories Support Our Call for Better Student Transport! Votes at 16! Fix Student Housing Become a Supporter A Fair Deal for Our Future
- Sign in
Pages tagged “Politics”
-
New first minister a chance to refocus on challenges facing Welsh students and apprentices
Eluned Morgan has been officially confirmed as Wales' new first minister.
Written by NUS Wales
August 06, 2024 -
NUS praises progressive Plaid Cymru Manifesto
The National Union of Students welcomes an aspirational and progressive manifesto from Plaid Cymru which commits the party to principles of equality of opportunity, free movement, and free education for all. The manifesto contains measures which would tackle the many crises the country currently faces and would make a meaningful difference to student lives.
- Their pledge to make university education free for all and their commitment to introducing tuition and maintenance loans for all adults over 18 in both further and higher education could revolutionise access to higher education.
- Plaid have outlined a strong commitment to lifelong learning including a lifetime learning allowance, offering a grant of £5,000 to every individual over 25 to train or retrain, and a commitment to address the fall in part-time and mature study.
- We welcome their strong commitment to apprentices through an apprentice living wage. Apprenticeships should be a mechanism of social change; allowing people to train without taking on debt. An apprentice living wage will allow people to take advantage of these opportunities.
- Further education learners are supported through Plaid’s promise of free meals and travel which would greatly help reduce the financial burden of studying and improve access to education for all.
- Increasing funding for the Coleg Cymraeg Cenedlaethol is welcome and would provide Welsh Language opportunities for learners.
- We support policies which would see the expansion of social housing and give Wales the power to implement rent controls, along with other market interventions, to make housing affordable. We have campaigned tirelessly against an exploitative student rental sector and these measures would go some way to halting the cycle of rising rents and falling standards.
- We also welcome the pledge to give votes to 16-year-olds and to scrap voter ID, which disproportionately disenfranchises young people, people from low socioeconomic backgrounds, racialised communities and LGBT+ people. The student and youth movement has been campaigning to bring in Votes at 16 for decades. 16 and 17-year-olds are facing a future of climate change and global instability: it is only fair their voices have a chance to shape our futures.
- Plans to retain the graduate route visa and empower Wales to participate in pan-European programmes is good news to international students. This would also offer students a freedom of movement which has been denied since leaving the European Union.
- Other pledges we welcome include: plans to strengthening the use of the Welsh language in workplace learning for 16 to 25-year-olds, commitments to improve bus services, and supporting the principle of basic universal income for all.
There are a few omissions, however. We note:
- We welcome the proposed increase in child benefit however, whilst 94% of children in Wales qualify for the payment, 16 to 18-year-olds on apprenticeships are not eligible and would therefore fall through the cracks.
- While the party’s pledges on housing would make great strides in tackling the student housing crisis, we note there is nothing about scrapping the need for a guarantor.
A NUS Wales Spokesperson said:
“Plaid Cymru are offering hope and aspiration to young people who have seen their opportunities shrink in recent years.
“Apprentices, students, and students' unions up and down the UK have been lobbying to secure a future for us all - and we're pleased to see Plaid Cymru has listened to some of our core asks. Equality of opportunity, free movement, and free education for all are fundamental principles in the student movement and it’s pleasing to see them echoed here.
“Students are the future. They are the next generation of doctors, nurses, teachers and public sector workers; they are the engineers, researchers and political leaders who will solve the crises which threaten our society and our world.
“Students and young people are looking to their political leaders for hope, a picture of a better future, and a reason to vote for them. This manifesto offers a clear vision for students and young people, within a strong, welcoming and inclusive Wales.”
Written by NUS Wales
June 13, 2024 -
NUS celebrates progressive Green manifesto
NUS welcomes and celebrates the Green Party’s 2024 manifesto which is aspirational and progressive, contains measures which would tackle the many crises the country faces, and would make a meaningful difference to student lives.
Written by NUS Wales
June 12, 2024 -
NUS condemns the Conservative Party manifesto: “No offer to alleviate the very real struggles faced by students and young people.”
NUS is disappointed by the Conservative Party’s continued lurch to the right with the launch of their 2024 manifesto, which contains a range of measures that will do nothing to alleviate the struggles students face. Instead, the measures announced will compound student suffering, punish international students, and do little to solve the pressing problems we face.
Written by NUS Wales
June 11, 2024 -
NUS welcomes the Liberal Democrat manifesto, but does it go far enough?
NUS welcomes the Liberal Democrat’s 2024 manifesto which contains several pledges which will undoubtedly help students and apprentices. But we believe the party’s promises are too vague and need further fleshing out.
We welcome:
- Their pledge to bring down the voting age to 16
- Their pledge to abolish the apprentice minimum wage.
- Their recognition of the student mental crisis and promise to do more to address it.
- Their recognition of the value of international students and the need to take them out of the migration figures.
Our concerns:
- We are pleased to see them reiterate their pledge to reinstate grants for disadvantaged students, but believe all students should get the grant, with maintenance loans and tuition fees abolished for all, as shown to be cost effective by recent research by the Sutton Trust.
- On renters the party promises to protect the rights of social renters, but will they pick up the Renters Reform Bill - which was gutted and then dropped by the last government - and reinstate its protections for student renters? Most importantly, will they protect student renters from Section 21 evictions?
NUS UK Vice President for Liberation and Equality, Nehaal Bajwa, said:
“There is a lot to welcome here, and the Liberal Democrats have listened to us. However, the policies contained in the Liberal Democrat manifesto are a welcome first step, but for meaningful change, we must go further. We need free education, high quality affordable housing and commitments to the rights of international students. It is now for the other parties to respond to the challenge and offer students and young people something to vote for. Students are increasingly politicised and angry, and it would be foolish for any politician or political party to take us for granted on polling day."
Written by NUS Wales
June 10, 2024 -
Students frozen out of Welsh Draft Budget
Students demanded cost-of-living support on Tuesday afternoon at a rally organised by the National Union of Students (NUS).
On the same day that the Welsh Government published its Draft Budget for 2023/24, speakers urged ministers to act by boosting student finance and cutting costs including rent and transport.
December 15, 2022