Britain | Class struggle

Labour’s cabinet would be Britain’s most state-educated since 1945

But its schools policy appears less radical than the class rhetoric suggests

The Labour Leader, Keir Starmer, joins in a games lesson during a school visit
Sir Keir takes aim at private schoolsImage: Alamy

IF THE labour party wins the next election, its government will be notable in one respect. Our review of the shadow cabinet’s biographies suggests that four people, or 13%, of its 31 members attended independent schools. Barring a big reshuffle, that would make it the cabinet with the most state-educated members since at least 1945. Rishi Sunak’s first cabinet in October 2022 was 61% privately educated, based on a tally by the Sutton Trust, an educational charity. Sir Tony Blair’s first cabinet was 32%, while Harold Wilson’s was 35% and Clement Attlee’s 25%. Under 7% of pupils are taught privately.

This article appeared in the Britain section of the print edition under the headline “Class struggle”

From the July 8th 2023 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Britain

Blue lights flashing on an ambulance

Many Britons are waiting 12 hours at A&E

The crisis in emergency care has deep roots

Is British justice too secretive?

Controversy rages over what happened both before and after a horrendous mass stabbing



The rise of the Net-Zero Dad

Middle-aged men care less about the problem. But they love the solution 

Backing Heathrow expansion suggests Labour is serious about boosting growth

It is the surest sign yet that the government is up for the fight