The lamentable plight of political parties at Newcastle University

Are students interested in politics or are we apathetic?

Henry Bateson
17th February 2025
Chris Beckett_Flickr
The Labour and Conservative societies at Newcastle University both have 16 members each. With around 28,000 students, the two main political parties can only muster support from 32 people. And that ignores the fact that some of the Conservative and Labour members have memberships of both societies, knowing full well the importance to keep the other alive. That equates to only 0.1% of Newcastle University that have memberships of the two main political parties.

It is true the requisite threshold of 15 has been surpassed (a necessary requirement for a society to exist). But with such small numbers, it shows one very clear problem for university students: conspicuous disenchantment with politics. I can sense a general, deepening frustration with the Tories and Labour. Tories balled up, crashed the economy, weren’t remotely conservative and failed on so many metrics; and the Labour party, since the 2024 general election, have proven to be unpopular with their high tax agenda.

Students are fed up with astronomical rents, escalating utilities and high tuition fees. Many are looking to alternative parties, hell-bent on changing the status quo, such as Reform UK and the Green Party. Despite the first-past-the-post electoral system, increased fragmentation in British politics indicates that the two-party system is looking more fragile by the day. Interestingly, there is not a Green or Reform UK society.

However, there are societies that are political in orientation. The Feminist society, Amnesty International and Palestine society are examples of societies that raise awareness of pressing and topical concerns. I believe their memberships are strong.

Political allegiances aside, it would have been a disaster if the Conservative and Labour societies folded. Their respective points and policies help foster nuance in debate and allow for opinions to be challenged. It was not far off ceasing to exist at Newcastle University. We should support both of them – or support any new start-ups next academic year.

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