gair rhydd y
gair rhydd | freeword Cardiff ’s student weekly Issue 1069 Monday 25th January 2016 Also in this issue
Advice: How to make those 2016 resolutions stick P8>>
NUS criticised by Students’ Union for lack of communication over maintenance grant abolition
Comment: How we respond to celebrity deaths P13>>
• Welsh Students’ Unions left unaware of changes to voting in Westminster despite alleged NUS knowledge • SU sabbatical officers pushed for emergency motion in shadow cabinet • Cardiff Central MP describes cuts to grants as “ideological attack” on students EXCLUSIVE Anna Lewis The National Union of Students (NUS) has come under criticism from Cardiff ’s Students’ Union elected officer team, after allegedly failing to provide important information about last week’s vote to cut maintenance grants. Last Tuesday, the government rejected Labour’s opposition day motion to stop the cuts to maintenance grants for English students. In a controversial decision, only English MPs were allowed to vote following the debate regardless of the thousands of English students that attend Welsh universities. According to one sabbatical officer, despite NUS’s knowledge of the situation, Students’ Unions and politicians across Wales were left unaware of this development. Talking to
Gair Rhydd, Vice President for Societies Hannah Sterritt explained that the news was only revealed through Twitter by a message written by NUS Wales President Beth Button, and not by NUS UK. In her tweet, Button explained that approximately 50 per cent of students in Welsh universities are funded by student finance England and would be directly affected by the decision. She also explained that she had talked to the House of Commons speaker John Bercow to contest the decision. According to Sterritt, although the NUS are usually reliable at providing important information, Cardiff Students’ Union were unable to procure further details from the institution on the day of the debate. As a result, the officer was left with no choice but to single-handedly inform other students’ unions and Welsh MPs of the news via social
media, phone and email. Like Button, Sterritt also contacted the Speaker at Westminster to lobby against stopping Welsh MPs from voting, encouraging others to do the same. As a result, thanks to the work of Cardiff Students’ Union, the MP for Cardiff Central Jo Stevens was also notified of the situation and was able to create an emergency motion in the shadow cabinet opposing the decision. In response to these suggestions, NUS Wales explained to Gair Rhydd that the Speaker’s decision to create an English-only vote was made “at a very late stage in a fast-moving process, with minimal communication and little precedent as to how it can be challenge.” It was also noted that as the government’s original Committee vote included MPs from Wales and Scotland, the Union “had been working
Pictured:
Students protest against cuts to maintenance grants (Photographer: The Weekly Bull via Flickr)
Continued on page 4
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