Justine Greening’s Social Mobility Pledge is a very good idea. Yet it passed with little fanfare. This may be an accident of timing. It was publicly birthed last week as all attention trained on the countdown to Brexit. Not that this will derail or deter the pledge. The desire to usher through genuine life chances and to make social mobility mean something underpinned much of Greening’s time as Education Secretary. When she was moved aside in January’s reshuffle, the intention and plans were not stuck in a drawer. Instead, they moved on with intent.
And so it was that last Wednesday Greening unveiled the plan. The simple, and broad, intention is to allow kids from less well-off areas to have the same life opportunities as their better-off peers. It means if you’re talented and smart but the pathways to success are blocked, the blocks will be removed.
Within this comes the pledge. It calls on employers to sign something that says they will attempt to hire solely on talent, rather than on name or school’s reputation. The pledge gets a little complicated when it begins to explain how even though there will be blind hiring (names as numbers so bias doesn’t sneak in) there will at the same time be some weighting in favour of pupils from underperforming schools. But there is momentum. A number of big employers have already signed up, including ITV and Adidas. And Greening, from Rotherham, is making the right noises about targeting deprived areas in the north of England.
We're proud to be one of the first businesses to sign up to the @thesmpledge
Launched by @HarrisonCentre and @JustineGreening , businesses including @bt_uk@ITV and @adidasUK are alongside us as founding supporters. We're proud to support opportunities for young people. pic.twitter.com/kd9iqun2BH
— TPInvestor (@TPInvestor) April 3, 2018
There are some legitimate concerns. How can a government that introduced an austerity programme that clobbered the poorest now shift gears to be all about the hand up? And where is the money coming from to make this work effectively? Is this a canny move by Greening to launch a leadership bid – she clearly is at odds with the way her party is being led and after Brexit is started in March 2019, the jockeying for leader of the Tories could begin again in earnest.
These are reasonable questions but should not cloud the inherently smart, good thinking behind the social mobility drive. Where you’re born should not be an impediment to where you end up.