Lib Dem Shadow Secretary of State for Education, Phil Willis this morning joined Leeds students and Leeds North West Parliamentary candidate, Greg Mulholland, at the Parkinson Steps to unveil figures suggesting that Leeds students will owe the Government up to £39,448,333 as a result of Labour's controversial top-up fees. By 2008 - when all undergraduates on 3-year courses will be affected - the figure will be three times as much.
Phil Willis reiterated the Lib Dems' commitment to scrap all tuition fees and restore grants to the students who need them most. In the key marginal seat of Leeds North West, the votes cast by students are likely to be decisive. With the Lib Dems making sweeping gains in local elections since 2001 and no visible Tory threat, Labour's majority looks increasingly vulnerable.
Commenting, Greg Mulholland said, "This figure brings home the scale of the debt which Labour are piling upon students at the start of their working lives. By 2008, Leeds students will be well on the way to owing the Government a quarter of a billion pounds. On May 5th, they owe it to themselves to send a clear message that they cannot be taken for granted."
Phil Willis said, "This election is the only chance students will get to make the Government sit up and listen. Leeds North West can be the seat which puts a stop to this disastrous policy. The Lib Dems will work for the abolition of fees and the reintroduction of grants."
Phil and Greg were joined by Jess Haigh - the Leeds student who accosted the Prime Minister on his recent visit to Leeds. She told Tony Blair that she will back the Lib Dems after Labour let her down over top-up fees and the war in Iraq.
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