We publish here the Marxist Student Federation's manifesto for the student movement: the policies and programme that revolutionary students should fight for.

This academic year will see elections taking place in campuses across the country for new student union officers and delegates to the NUS conference in April 2018. We publish here the Marxist Student Federation's manifesto for the student movement, which outlines the socialist policies and fighting programme that we will be demanding in these campaigns.

This academic year will see elections taking place in campuses across the country for new student union officers and delegates to the NUS conference in April 2018. Marxist students will be running in these of these elections at various universities in the coming months, campaigning on a socialist platform for fighting student unions.

We publish here the Marxist Student Federation's manifesto for the student movement, which outlines the policies and programme that we will be demanding in these campaigns.

Introduction

There is something seriously wrong with the world. In a time when there has never been more wealth on the planet, we are going to inherit a society from our parents in which our standard of living will be far worse than theirs.

We are going to have to work until we are older, for less money and then receive a pittance of a pension. We will struggle to ever have a secure place to live. We will have costly and lower quality healthcare. Our children will attend poorer, sub-standard schools. Environmental catastrophe could eradicate millions of people’s homes and lives.

There are enough resources in the world that none of this has to happen. But all the wealth and the natural resources are in the hands of the 1%. They don’t care about improving our lives – they only care about making profit for themselves.

We don’t have to take this lying down. We can fight for our future – the future of all young people. If we don’t stand up for ourselves no one else will. One hundred years ago, the Russian Revolution proved that revolutions can change the world. Our fight isn’t just against one particular regime. It’s against the capitalist system as a whole – a system based on greed, corruption, private property and exploitation. The mess the billionaire class have made of our future is not a case of capitalism gone wrong – this is the best that capitalism has to offer.

For this fight we need a serious and organised approach. We should study the history of class war and revolution – this is the theory of Marxism. And, as far as the student movement is concerned, we need to transform our student unions and the National Union of Students so they stand up and fight for us.

Student politics has mostly always been a sideshow of wannabe MPs practising the fine arts of hypocrisy, posturing and careerism, with a grossly overinflated sense of their own importance. We shouldn’t tolerate this self-indulgence anymore.

We are proposing a Marxist manifesto for the student movement. We stand for international socialist revolution. We are not interested in patching up a failed system – we want to smash capitalism and build a new society based on need, not profit.

Like any movement to change the world, we have to start somewhere. We are students, so we are going to start with our student unions and the National Union of Students. They have the power to lead millions of students in Britain with revolutionary socialist politics. As far as we are concerned that would be a big step in the right direction. Either our so-called representatives actually do something to fight for our future, or else they need to step aside and let those who will fight take the lead.

If you feel the same then you need to join our movement. Attend and organise Marxist societies at schools and universities; support Marxist candidates in student elections; and run in student elections on the basis of a Marxist manifesto.

This manifesto outlines the kind of world – a socialist world – that we want to live in. We are under no illusions that these demands will be easily won. We will have to fight, alongside the only progressive class: the working class. When the stakes are as high as they are now – when our future happiness and even our survival are on the line – this is a fight worth joining.

Education, the economy and society

We stand for free education, because society as a whole benefits from having an educated population. We are for the maximisation of educational opportunities for everyone, and are opposed to cuts and closures to university courses, further education colleges and school teaching staff.

We think education should be free for everyone, throughout the whole of their lives. We should get rid of the idea that education ends artificially at the age of 16 or 18 or 21. If people want to continue their studies as adults and alongside their work then education should be made freely available to them, and they should be given the necessary time off and childcare provision.

We stand for a society in which work and education are not artificially separated. Practical work and academic study should both be part of a person’s life from youth to old age. We stand for the integration of mental and manual education, so that, for example, every construction worker is also an architect.

Achieving this means keeping education free from the influence of big business. We are opposed to academies, because they are the first step towards the privatisation of schools. We are opposed to the privatisation of student accommodation and other student services at universities, because this causes universities to be run for the profits of private companies, instead of for the sake of education. And we’re against the business-model running of centres of learning, where learners are treated as little more than customers.

We want schools, colleges and universities to be run cooperatively by students, parents, teachers, academics and staff. We stand for democratic control of schools, colleges and universities by elected representatives, not unelected management. We want elected managers to be paid the same wage as teachers and staff, not university vice-chancellors who earn six-figure salaries while academic staff are taking pay cuts.

We are in favour of democratically run schools, colleges and universities to formulate a common national, and even international, strategy for education, based on the needs of students and society as a whole. If the NHS needs more nurses, then the education system should concentrate on training more nurses. If we need more builders, then more courses in construction should be offered.

We want a democratically decided plan of investment in research and development at universities, based on the needs of society. We’re firmly opposed to private companies, which are run for profit, dictating which research projects get funding and which don’t.

Taken all together: this is what genuinely free education looks like.

Housing and health

We stand for full living grants for all students over the age of 16. This is because giving students sufficient money to survive on will allow them to live and eat healthily, improving their mental and physical wellbeing.

We stand for the abolition of all student debt, which hangs around the necks of people long after they complete their studies as a source of anxiety and stress.

We stand for free, good quality accommodation for all students. To achieve this, we want a coordinated national campaign of rent strikes among students. Local rent strike committees should be formed, rent strike organisers should be trained and a rent strike fund should be established to cover any costs to students incurred by participating in rent strikes.

Full living grants and free accommodation go hand in hand with happier, healthier students.

We are opposed to the privatisation of the NHS and student health services which damages the

quality of and access to healthcare. We are opposed to cuts to NHS funding and to bursaries for student nurses. We are for massive public investment in health services.

With these measures, we can put a stop to the mental and physical health crisis that afflicts thousands of us ‒ this crisis has its roots in the capitalist system and its stranglehold over our education and employment.

Oppression and exploitation

We are opposed to oppression and exploitation in all its forms. Racism, sexism, homophobia and every other form of bigotry can and should be rendered extinct throughout society. Moreover, nobody should be prevented from accessing an education due to poverty, or suffer through miserable, low-paying work upon entering the employment.

We demand that free childcare be provided at all schools, colleges and universities, so that everyone has equal access to education. And we stand for full living grants for all students so that no one loses out on education because they can’t afford to take time off work. Being a student is a full-time occupation and no one should be forced to work to survive whilst trying to study.

For those students who have jobs we are for their organisation as workers to fight for better rights at work. We are opposed to the casualisation of graduate teaching assistants. We are in favour of the living wage for apprentices. We are for the prohibition of zero-hours contracts, on which many young people and students are employed and through which they are exploited. We are in favour of flexibility of working hours on our terms, and based on our needs, not those of the bosses.

We are opposed to the Prevent legislation, because it is an attack on civil liberties that disproportionately targets Muslim students, and is increasingly being used against radical left-wing students. We stand for a mass campaign aimed at winning staff over to the side of students, and refusing to cooperate with the government on this scheme.

We stand for the unity of the working class and students, whose collective action is the weapon with which we will stamp out oppression and exploitation of all kinds.

The class struggle

The only way to achieve our aims is a campaigning strategy that is coordinated with the trade unions, the labour movement, and the working class as a whole.

We want joint meetings and campaigns with trade union branches and organisations over local, regional, national and international issues. We want a public and bold joint strategy by student unions and trade unions to fight for the rights of workers’ and young people and to fight against capitalism, including escalating demonstrations and strikes.

As part of this strategy, we want a student-led campaign, locally and nationally, to sign up post-graduate students and university academic staff to the University and College Union (UCU), to sign up non-academic staff to relevant unions (Unison/Unite etc.), and to sign up teachers to the National Union of Teachers (NUT).

We want coordinated student walkouts in solidarity with staff who are taking strike action. And we are for a campaign to raise funds for students to support education workers on strike.

We stand for giving the student and trade union movement a political expression through Corbyn’s Labour party which can fight for the overthrow of the Tory government.

Internationalism

We stand for international solidarity with students fighting for their rights and a better world, from

South Africa to Brazil, from the USA to Palestine.

To show our solidarity concretely we are in favour of raising funds from the student movement to help the struggle of students in countries around the world. And we want local and national meetings to debate, discuss and issue public statements of support for the international student struggle.

We are opposed to the discrimination faced by international students. We are for the abolition of all tuition fees for international students. And we are opposed to the policy of sending international students out of the country as soon as their degree is completed.

Building a mass movement

To achieve everything in this manifesto we stand for the creation of an active mass movement in which millions of students can participate, based on the policies in this manifesto. This is the only way to make student unions relevant to the lives of students – by involving them in a struggle to materially improve their lives in a meaningful way.

We want the creation of local grassroots campaigning groups, which can hold discussion and planning meetings on the ideas in this manifesto, and put campaigns for policies in this manifesto into practice in their local school, college or university.

We want to see a massive and permanent social media campaign in which millions of students can participate, to get these ideas and campaigns into the public eye.

We stand for the creation of a school student union that can give voice and representation to students of all ages, and bring them into the struggle for radical political change.

Mass engagement with student unions will be dependent on bold policies and well-coordinated campaigns that capture the burning desire for radical change in society.

For a future free from capitalism

As a society, we have the resources to achieve all the demands in this manifesto. The banks, the biggest businesses, and the wealthiest individuals have enormous cash reserves and private ownership over the entire economy. We demand that the rich pay to give young people a future.

Some people say that taxing the rich and big businesses is the way to make them pay for decent education, housing and healthcare. We agree that the rich should pay, and we say that the only way to make them pay is to take them over. The biggest landlords, the banks, and the biggest businesses should be nationalised immediately and without one penny of compensation paid to the wealthy owners who have been getting rich by exploiting the rest of us for decades.

On that basis, not only could we fund free education, but we could rationally and democratically plan the economy, with the full participation and control of the working class. That would be the only way of linking up the needs of society with the ability of the education system and the economy to satisfy them.

This would be a system based on need, not profit. It would be a socialist system. And to achieve it we have to overthrow the capitalist system which puts profit above all else.

Together with the organised working class, we can overthrow the capitalist order ‒ run by the rich, for the rich ‒ and transform society into one fit for humanity.

There can be no free education without socialism, and no socialism without revolution. Students and workers ‒ unite and fight!