One of the more depressing sights in politics at the moment is how Andy Burnham is
leading the Labour party back to its comfort zone on education. Burnham, who The Spectator once named minister to watch, seems to have jettisoned all of his Blairite reforming instincts. He now
wants to draw as many dividing lines as possible and side with the vested interests and the status quo at every turn.
In last night’s education debate, Barry Sheerman, who chaired the education select committee during the Labour years, pointed out that Gove’s education plans are building on the last government’s incomplete reforms. As Sheerman put it, “I am going to be honest: much of the Bill could have come from the previous Labour Administration.” Sheerman criticised parts of the legislation but he tellingly refused to follow the whip and vote against the bill last night, instead positively abstaining.

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