How students can build a movement to stop the slaughter in Gaza

We have witnessed a year of brutal slaughter of Palestinians in Gaza, and increasingly in the West Bank too.

It has exposed to the world how capitalist politicians do not value human life, despite what they say about wanting an end to the conflict. Many people here in the UK have felt anger at the situation in Gaza, and taken to the streets to protest.

Many students have also taken things into their own hands, protesting against their university bosses, calling for divestment from arms companies and companies that prop up Israeli state terror.

School and college students have organised walkouts and protests in solidarity with the Palestinians. Towards the end of last term, student encampments were organised up and down the country, exposing universities’ links to arms companies and banks. Socialist Students members were involved with many of these.

We fight for the 7-million-strong trade union movement to be central. It is the threat of workers getting organised and fighting back that terrifies the capitalist world leaders, including in the Middle East.

It is a mass movement of workers and poor people, democratically organised and fighting for socialist change, in Palestine and across the region, that can point the way forward to an end to war and national oppression.

We call for an end to the marketisation of higher education and an end of the tuition-fee funding model. Universities are becoming ever more reliant on money from big business, including from arms companies such as BAE Systems and Lockheed Martin, due to cuts in funding from government. University education should be free for all, and fully publicly funded by making the super-rich pay.

The huge determined protests against the slaughter in Gaza have defied attempts by politicians and police to intimidate them. That defiance led to the hated Suella Braverman being sacked as home secretary.

Pro-Palestinian campaigners standing in the general election had a huge effect in a whole number of constituencies. Jeremy Corbyn was reelected, in addition to another four anti-war independent MPs.

That must be built on to deliver the new workers’ party needed to give a voice to the anti-war, socialist opposition to Starmer. Student protests this term can have a big effect too – and Socialist Students is determined to make them as effective as possible.

If you want to be part of the fightback, get involved!


What Ideas should students get organised around?

Universities should open their books to a democratic inquiry by elected students’ representatives and the
campus trade unions, with the power to terminate all contracts and research tied to war and occupation,
while guaranteeing jobs and funding.

END MARKETISATION!

The government must fully fund education to disincentivise universities from gambling our fees on dodgy companies and ‘vanity projects’. Scrap tuition fees, cancel student debt, and reintroduce living grants for all students.

WE NEED A POLITICAL VOICE!

Winning a free, democratic, and genuinely ethical education system means fighting to take wealth and power off the capitalist elites. Starmer’s Labour government won’t even begin to fight for this. We need a mass workers’ party, with a socialist programme to end the capitalist system that breeds war and oppression.

MAXIMISE OUR STRENGTH!

Our movement would be strengthened if more students and workers joined. Socialist Students is calling for students to join us with:

• Mass meetings open to all who want to discuss how we can build a movement against war, oppression and capitalism
• Stalls and leafleting sessions, where we can talk to other students about any upcoming protests and action, and encourage them to join
• A rally with speakers invited from local trade union branches, and students from other universities, colleges and schools nearby
• A lobby of our local MP or councillors alongside other students, workers and trade unionists, to demand they explain their position on the Israeli state’s onslaught in Gaza


See more of our campaigning:


Build a movement to smash racism!


Tens of thousands of students and workers came out onto the streets to confront attempts by the far right to mobilise racist riots. This magnificent show of solidarity shows the potential to build a movement that can smash racism – and the decades of cuts and rising poverty.

Desperate to divert growing anger at their system, capitalist politicians of all varieties and backgrounds have used racist scapegoating of immigrants to try and divert the blame for the crisis of their system. But, as Malcolm X said: “you can’t have capitalism without racism.”

Reform’s Nigel Farage is one particularly odious politician who consistently spouts divisive racist and anti-Muslim rhetoric. He is the highest earning MP, netting a million pounds a year in addition to his MP’s salary, all the while peddling the fraud that he is an anti-establishment ‘man of the people’.

But to focus entirely on him and his party lets the rest of the capitalist politicians off the hook. The Tories spent the last years in government talking incessantly about migrants on small boats and taking part in the expensive political theatre of Rwanda deportation flight plans in the hope of diverting blame and anger for falling living standards away from themselves.

The cost-of-living crisis, high tuition fees and student debt, low wages, high rents, the collapse of public services. These are the results of funding cuts and privatisation carried out by both Tory and Labour capitalist politicians serving the interests of big business.

But the Tories’ crushing general election defeat showed the huge anger at the attacks on living standards of the working class. It followed the huge strike wave and mass protests against the war on Gaza which have brought students and workers together in a common struggle.

Starmer has said there is ‘little difference’ between him and the Tories on immigration, and continues to support the Israeli onslaught on Gaza. The new Labour government is committed to a continuation of privatisation and cutbacks to public services, making the working class pay for the crisis rather than taking the money off the super-rich.

Those who defend capitalism want to divide the working class including by using racism. That weakens our ability to unite and fight against them and the rotten profit system they defend.

This latest surge of racist violence serves as a warning as to what can develop under a Labour government which is continuing with the Tories’ austerity policies – already cutting pensioners’ winter fuel payments and promising billions of pounds of further cuts, including to the education sector and universities. The election of five Reform MPs is a warning too.

The only way to successfully cut across far-right ideas getting a platform is for the workers’ movement to build mass struggle to fight for a socialist programme that unites workers against the bosses – for jobs, homes and public services for all.

If the 6.5 million-strong trade union movement was to lead a struggle for those things – bringing together workers and young people from all backgrounds – it would give an expression to the huge anger and discontent that exists under the surface in society.

The task of defending our communities from racist attacks, strengthening the level of organisation of students and the working class, and developing a workers’ political voice in the form of a new workers’ party– all go hand in hand.


The effect of a political voice that stands for the interests of workers and young people not the fat cats was glimpsed in the 2017 general election. It is estimated that one million UKIP voters switched to supporting Jeremy Corbyn’s programme of cutting tuition fees, council homes, security at work, and more funding for the NHS and other vital services.

Socialist Students campaigns for students to get organised on campus to fight for all of this. We want to build a united movement of workers and students to overthrow this rotten system of capitalism for good.

We fight for the socialist transformation of society, based on bringing the commanding heights of the economy and the banks into democratic public ownership. Under the democratic control and management of the working-class majority, society’s wealth and resources could be planned to meet all of our needs. That is a necessary component of the fight to end racism and all forms of oppression and inequality for good.

If you want to fight back against racism, war and inequality, then join Socialist Students and get organised!


No to racism and the far-right! Build a united student and workers’ movement for good jobs, homes and public services – including free education for all!

Fight to build a political voice for the working class – a socialist alternative to Labour and all the capitalist parties. You can’t have capitalism without racism!

Fight for a socialist world free from exploitation and oppression!


Join the socialist opposition to Starmer and capitalism!

A lot has happened since last term.

The Tories have finally been booted out after 14 years of attacks on young people and the working class.

But Labour has wasted no time showing it has nothing to offer the millions of people in Britain who are desperate for something better.

A new Labour government did nothing to prevent racist riots stoking fear and division this summer.

While MPs holidayed on their £90k salaries, the job of routing far-right violence fell to thousands of anti-racist protestors in cities and towns across the UK.

But this government will only foster more racist scapegoating and division. None of the pro-capitalist parties – including the Labour government – have anything positive to offer, because they all stand for a capitalist system that puts the profits of a super-rich few before everything else.

They all want to divide us – with racism, sexism, LGBTQ+phobia and anything else they can find – to weaken our ability to unite and fight against them and the rotten profit system they defend.

But none of that can stop fierce opposition growing under this Labour government.

Hundreds and thousands of young people have protested against the Israeli state’s genocidal war on Gaza in the past year, with students launching our own protest encampments in universities up and down the country. That fight is going to continue this term.

Starmer has already promised that “things will get worse” on his watch. His government is reporting a £22 billion ‘black hole’ in its finances, and it wants us to foot the bill through cuts to our services, like schools and the NHS. So there will have to be opposition to these attacks too.

Workers will have to strike for decent living conditions under Labour, just like they did on a massive scale in the final years of the Tory government. Labour has already been forced to give pay rises to NHS workers and teachers – they were scared that if they didn’t, then those workers would strike against them! It all goes to show that when we fight, we can win – and that students can strengthen our potential to fight back by linking up with the workers’ movement.

Ultimately, we need to channel all these different struggles – against racism, and war and occupation; for decent pay, and good-quality services and homes for all; for a safe and sustainable climate – into one massive movement that fights to end capitalism and build a socialist world free from exploitation and oppression.

A world in which society’s wealth and resources would be democratically owned and planned by the working class to meet the needs of all, instead of to make profits for the few.

That’s what Socialist Students is fighting for from day one of the new term. If you want to build the socialist opposition to Starmer and capitalism, join us!


Starmer and his ministers are considering raising tuition fees to plug the gaping hole in higher education funding – a far cry from 2019 when former leader Jeremy Corbyn was promising to abolish them!

If Starmer goes ahead with increasing tuition fees, or any other attack on universities, then there will need to be mass student meetings held on every campus to discuss and democratically agree a concrete plan of action to organise and defend our futures.

Socialist Students would help to organise such meetings and build protests wherever we can. We also campaign as part of the Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition (TUSC) for steps to be taken towards building a new mass workers’ party that gives a socialist alternative to Starmer’s Labour and all the pro-capitalist parties – including standing for free education.

Read our full article on the university funding crisis below:

Uni funding crisis: Prepare for struggles ahead

Adam Powell-Davies, Socialist Students national organiser

The risk of universities going bankrupt made it onto Keir Starmer’s pre-election ‘shitlist’ of major immediate challenges facing a Labour government.

Will Starmer’s Labour government raise tuition fees? Will it be the first to let a university go bankrupt on its watch?

Following the election of the new Labour government in particular, university vice-chancellors and higher education thinktanks have wasted no time speculating on what a university bankruptcy could mean – and setting out their views on what an adequate government response would look like.

Clearly a university going under would have catastrophic consequences. In many towns and cities, universities are one of the biggest employers, often second only to the NHS. Many thousands of jobs would be lost. Potentially tens of thousands of students would be without a course. There are fears that if one university went, it would trigger a domino effect throughout the sector.

That’s why Labour would be likely to intervene – for example, by providing emergency funding, with strings attached. In 1987, Thatcher’s Tory government found £20 million to save the then University College Cardiff, but only while mandating its takeover by the neighbouring University of Wales institute of Technology to create Cardiff University.

At the same time, state intervention to save a university would raise the sights of workers and young people to demand similar intervention; for pay rises, public service funding and more.

Labour would much rather take short-term measures to prevent the chaos of a university bankruptcy being posed in the first place.

A recently published review by the Office for Students (OfS) – the university regulator – concluded that financial challenges are “rapidly crystalising” with budget deficits, redundancies and course closures. Failure to manage these risks will “undoubtedly lead to a market exit, potentially in the near term, of one or more large providers”.

The government has accepted the recommendations of the review, putting out a statement that “the role of the Office for Students will be refocused to prioritise the financial stability of the higher education sector”. Crucially, however, the government is yet to respond to the recommendation to “clarify its position on market exit”. The University and College Union immediately put out a statement calling for new funding for the OfS to be able to directly intervene to support struggling universities. Key for students and workers is not just more funding, but control of how the money is spent.

How did unis get to this point?

In 2017, the Tories were forced to freeze tuition fees in England at £9,250 a year – a concession made under pressure of Jeremy Corbyn’s call for free education.

The real value of tuition fees has fallen dramatically due to inflation, to the point that universities now lose roughly £4,000 on average for every UK undergraduate.

This funding shortfall has driven a trend towards universities relying on international students, in effect using these students’ much higher tuition fees to subsidise the cost of teaching UK students.

However, international student applications are reportedly down by around one-third on last year. This recruitment crisis is a major reason why 40% of universities are predicted to run deficit budgets this coming year. The real value of higher education funding is at its lowest point since fees were trebled in 2012.

What will Labour do?

With Starmer abandoning his pledge for free education last year, Labour could complete the U-turn by increasing tuition fees. New education secretary Bridget Phillipson has more than once refused to rule this out when asked. New Labour linchpin Peter Mandelson went as far as calling for an “immediate uptick in fees” at a reception in Westminster this July.

Unfreezing the tuition fee cap would mean fees rising every year with inflation. That was how it was supposed to be, before Corbynism became a meddling factor in the plans of capitalist politicians.

Another option is to undo the visa restrictions brought in this year by the Tories, which prevent international students from bringing family members to the UK.

Labour’s approach may well be a combination of these things. But whatever they decide, clearly it will not involve any substantial increase in direct public funding for higher education, let alone free education. Phillipson has previously boasted about her plans for universities that could be implemented “without adding a penny to government borrowing or general taxation”.

And Labour will also want to cut back on the indirect public funding given to universities in the form of student loans. Despite the Tories’ attempts to overhaul the loan repayment system, most student loans continue to go unpaid and become government debt. The current figure for outstanding student debt is about £250 billion, equivalent to over 10% of GDP.

Appearing on Sky News last week, the new Labour skills minister Jacqui Smith declared that “it’s first of all in the hands of universities to take the action necessary in order to be as efficient as possible”. This is Labour’s warning to universities: “Even if our government does something on university funding, you will still have to make cuts if you want that money to go far enough”.

Fight Labour attacks

Overall, it looks like Labour will squeeze students for extra funds, which they hope will be enough to stave off bankruptcies in the short term, but not enough to remove the incentive on universities to make ‘difficult decisions’ over the longer term.

Any attempt to make students pay higher tuition fees would be met with widespread anger, not just among current university students but also school and college students planning to attend university.

Given that over half of under-30s in Britain now go to university, an attack on university students would be widely seen as an attack on young people’s futures in general.

There is already huge discontent among millions of young people, who see little to nothing positive about society as it is currently organised. They see themselves growing up in a world that allows uncontrolled war, poverty, climate degradation – all overseen by a tiny elite at the top, who get richer and richer while everyone else gets poorer.

In this context, the announcement of even a small fees increase could spark explosions on campus and among young people in general. Students would have to respond by calling mass meetings in every university, as well as colleges and schools, to collectively debate and discuss how to build a movement to fight Labour attacks on education, on young people and the working class as whole.

When Tony Blair introduced tuition fees in 1998, it sparked a big student movement. When the Tory-Lib Dem government trebled fees in 2010, it was the same again.

In 2024, the marketised fees model of higher education is in limbo. Labour want to keep it on life support while making students and the working class pay; socialists have to fight for a real alternative – a free and fully funded education system, run democratically by students, university staff and the local community for all to enjoy, as part of a socialist society organised to meet people’s needs, not profit.


Socialist Students says:

  • Fight for fully funded free education – scrap and refund tuition fees, cancel student debt, replace student loans with living grants tied to the rate of inflation. Make the super-rich pay!
  • Take universities under the democratic control of elected bodies of campus trade unions, students and communities
  • Build democratic student organisations to link up with the campus trade unions and fight for what our universities need
  • Build a new mass party that will stand up for students and workers
  • Fight for socialist change – for democratic public ownership of the banks, monopolies and major industry to provide us with a future