By Angus Saul, Head of Communications, The Christian Institute

British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has made some shocking comments linking home education with extremism.

In a speech about promoting British values and cultural integration, he condemned terrorist attacks against the Jewish community, and said: “How can it be right to turn a blind eye to racist hatred of any kind. Whether the victims are Jews, Muslims or any minority? It can’t.”

“And so frankly, we do need to be much clearer as a society about what we expect of people, and the responsibilities that come with rights.”

“That means much stronger powers for the Charity Commission to shut down charities that promote extremism.”

PM LINKS RACIAL HATRED AND EXTREMISM WITH HOMESCHOOLING

“It means tougher regulation of homeschooling, because schools are so important for integration, and so we need a higher bar for people who want to opt-out of that responsibility,” the PM added.

There is so much wrong with this.

Firstly, he’s paired extremism and racial hatred with homeschooling, which is both appalling and ludicrous.

The vast majority of home-educated children are not being trained as extremists; they’re not being taught to hate democracy and Britain — they are learning English and Maths and Art and Music.

HOMESCHOOLING PARENTS ANNOYED, CLAIMING THEIR KIDS GET A MORE ROUNDED EDUCATION

A lot of home-educating parents would argue their children are receiving a much more rounded education than they would be getting in school.

So this haphazard pairing of home education and extremism has rightly got parents annoyed.

Secondly, schools are important for integration.

Yes, it is good for children to mix with others their own age, but home education does not prevent that.

There are lots of reasons parents choose to withdraw their children from school – sometimes because of bullying, sometimes it’s because they feel their child is not receiving a proper education.

But increasingly we know more parents are concerned about their children being indoctrinated with LGBT ideology.

PM”s MOTIVE SOUNDS SIMILAR TO AXED SCOTTISH SCHEME

Ten years ago, The Christian Institute took on the Scottish Government in a legal case, arguing that its Named Persons Scheme was state overreach into family life.

 The controversial initiative intended to provide every child with a single point of contact — usually a health visitor or teacher — to monitor their well-being and offer support. 

The Supreme Court agreed it was overreach and in its judgment said: “The first thing that a totalitarian regime tries to do is to get at the children, to distance them from the subversive, varied influences of their families, and indoctrinate them in their rulers’ view of the world.”

Doesn’t this sound like what Sir Keir is trying to do?

‘IS PM FORCING PARENTS TO SEND THEIR KIDS TO SCHOOLS TO BE INDOCTRINATED?”

In the name of integration, is he forcing parents to send their children to school so that they can be indoctrinated in the things he wants them to learn?

Then he says there needs to be a higher bar for people who want to opt out of that responsibility.

“It is not a responsibility to send your children to school.

The Bible teaches that parents are the primary educators of their children.

The Education Act says the same.

Parents can delegate that responsibility to schools; schools are an option if they want to send their children to them.”

A PROPOSED LAW IS ALREADY SEEKING GREATER STATE CONTROL OF CHILDREN

I went to a state school. My child goes to a state school. But while they’ve become the default for most parents, people should not be prevented from educating their children as they think best.

There has been a lot of discussion in the House of Lords about the Government’s Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill.

There were plans for highly bureaucratic registers, where parents have to provide all sorts of information about how they educate their children, when it is done, who is teaching them, for how many hours, and much more than that.

Thankfully, the Peers ditched the most bureaucratic elements, although the registers will remain.

ORIGINAL BILL WOULD HAVE PUT SUNDAY SCHOOLS UNDER STATE CONTROL

Many home educators will still object to the registers in principle – understandably so as it’s stepping over into territory where you have to gain approval from the State to decide how to teach your children.

But removing most of that bureaucracy from the proposals means the registers will be a lot less intrusive than they could have been.

The bill as it was originally drafted would have required parents to name anybody else involved in the education of their child.

That looked like including Sunday Schools, also putting them under an obligation to provide personal information to the local authority.

The revisions put in a threshold and, as long as the provision is below a certain amount per week, that duty will not apply.

These inflammatory statements from Sir Keir were at best misguided, and at worst betray a total lack of trust in parents’ ability to raise their children.

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