fbpx
Wikipedia

Oxford Union

The Oxford Union Society, commonly referred to as the Oxford Union, is a debating society in the city of Oxford, UK, whose membership is drawn primarily from the University of Oxford. Founded in 1823, it is one of Britain's oldest university unions and one of the world's most prestigious private students' societies.[1] The Oxford Union exists independently from the university[2] and is distinct from the Oxford University Student Union.

The Oxford Union Society
The Oxford Union Society's crest
Formation1823
TypeStudent debating union
HeadquartersOxford, England
Location
  • Frewin Court, Oxford, OX1 3JB
President
Hannah Edwards (Lincoln College)
AffiliationsWorld Universities Debating Council
Websiteoxford-union.org

The Oxford Union has a tradition of hosting some of the world's most prominent individuals across politics, academia, and popular culture ranging from Albert Einstein and Michael Jackson to Sir Winston Churchill, Ronald Reagan, Queen Elizabeth II and Mahathir Mohamad. Many former Presidents of the Union have gone on to hold high office in the UK and Commonwealth, including William Gladstone, Ted Heath, Boris Johnson, and Benazir Bhutto.

History and status edit

Genesis edit

The Oxford Union was founded as an independent forum for unrestricted debate by junior members of Oxford University in 1823. At the time, the University prohibited junior members from discussing certain issues, such as matters of theology. Although restrictions of speech within the University have since been lifted, the Oxford Union has remained separate from and independent of the university and is constitutionally bound to remain so.

The first meeting of the Society was held illegally in a room in Peckwater Quad at Christ Church. The first recorded debate was about Parliamentarianism vs Royalism during the English Civil War. By the late 1820s, the Oxford Union was established enough to have regular elections, a growing collection of books, and formalised relations with its sister society The Cambridge Union. In the early 1830s the Union held its first debate on having confidence in HM Government, a tradition that is continued to this day. As the Society developed, it bought a plot of land by Frewin Court in central Oxford and commissioned Benjamin Woodward, who was then working on the University Museum, to design new buildings for the Society's use. These initial buildings, opened in 1857, included the original debating chamber. By the 1870s, the Society had grown too large for the chamber and commissioned a new chamber by Alfred Waterhouse. Finished in 1878 and opened the following year, the Union's new Debating Chamber was the largest purpose-built debating chamber in the world. The original chamber became the Society's library and is now home to over 60,000 volumes. A further period of building began in the early 1900s when an extension was built between the Steward's House and the main premises of the Society.[2]

Status edit

The Oxford Union is an unincorporated association; its property is held in trust in favour of its objectives and members, and governed by its rules (which form a multipartite contract between the members).[3] Its members are almost exclusively drawn from the University of Oxford with some provision for members who are resident in Oxford or attend Oxford Brookes University.

Women members edit

Until 1963, women were excluded from membership of the Oxford Union. The admission of women to the Union required a 2/3 vote of its past and current members. The first vote to admit women failed, with 903 men voting to admit women and 459 voting against.[4] The second vote, on 9 February 1963, succeeded, 1,039 to 427.[5] Oxford student Judith Okely, who had led the campaign to admit women, then became the first woman member.[6] Geraldine Jones of St Hugh's College was in 1967 the first woman to be elected President of the Oxford Union.[5]

Notable debates edit

1933: King and Country Debate edit

The Oxford Union has long associated itself with freedom of speech, most famously by debating and passing the motion "This House would under no circumstances fight for its King and country" in 1933. The debate polarized opinion across the country, with the Daily Telegraph running an article headlined "DISLOYALTY AT OXFORD: GESTURE TOWARDS THE REDS".[7]

Several prominent Union members (including Randolph Churchill) tried to expunge this motion and the result of the debate from the Union's minute book. This attempt was defeated in a meeting more attended than the original debate. Sir Edward Heath records in his memoirs that Churchill was then chased around Oxford by undergraduates who intended to debag him (i.e., humiliate him by removing his trousers), and was then fined by the police for being illegally parked.[8]

1964: Extremism Debate edit

In 1964, the Oxford Union invited American civil rights activist Malcolm X to speak on the motion, "This House Believes Extremism in Defence of Liberty is no Vice; Moderation in the Pursuit of Justice is no Virtue".[9]

1975: EEC Membership edit

In 1975 the Union debated the motion "This House Would Say Yes to Europe" with Conservative Leader Ted Heath, Liberal Party leader Jeremy Thorpe and senior Labour cabinet minister Barbara Castle speaking in the debate. It was televised live by the BBC shortly before the referendum, in June 3rd 1975.[10]

1985: Nuclear Armament edit

In 1985, David Lange, Prime Minister of New Zealand, debated against the American evangelist, the Revd Jerry Falwell, the motion "This House Believes Nuclear Weapons are Morally Indefensible."[9]

Notable speakers edit

The Union puts on a wide variety of events for its members, but is best known for its Thursday night debates and individual speaker events. In both of these, leading figures from public life are invited to discuss something of interest to the membership. Amongst the earliest individual addresses made to the Union were speeches given by Lord Randolph Churchill at the start of the 20th Century and Millicent Fawcett who became the first woman to address the Oxford Union in 1908.

Since then notable speakers to have addressed the members of the Oxford Union include:

Membership edit

Membership of the Oxford Union falls into four classes: life membership, long-term membership, temporary membership, and residential membership. Temporary membership can take four forms: course-length membership, termly membership, visiting membership, and (confusingly) permanent membership. The overwhelming majority of members are life members; the criterion for membership is being a fully matriculated member of the University of Oxford or a member of one of the Union's "kindred societies", namely:

All those eligible for life membership can instead apply for long-term membership for a period of at least the duration of their course,[12] and all such long-term members can, while eligible, apply to transfer to life membership.[13]

Students at certain other educational institutions in Oxford, most notably Oxford Brookes University, are entitled to join for the duration of their course.[14] Shorter membership is also extended to staff members of the University of Oxford or of any of its colleges or permanent private halls.[15] Members of a number of other institutions, together with those participating in some visiting study programmes in Oxford, are also eligible to apply for temporary membership,[16] while members of Oxford Brookes University alone are entitled to apply for permanent membership.[17]

Guests staying at the Oxford Union Society/Landmark Trust flat in the Old Steward's House are deemed to be visiting members of the Society for the duration of their stay in the flat.[18] Residential memberships are available to Oxford residents who are not from the university, but only if they are deemed worthy by a full meeting of the Union's Standing Committee after submitting a written application to the Secretary and subsequent interview by a member of the Standing Committee.[19]

The Union buildings edit

The Oxford Union buildings are located in Frewin Court (off Cornmarket Street) and on St Michael's Street, and are owned by a separate charitable trust, the Oxford Literary and Debating Union Trust ("OLDUT").[20]

OLDUT edit

The Oxford Union was never financially secure and had a significant level of historic debt associated with the erection of its buildings. Following a particularly bad period in the 1970s, the Union buildings were sold to OLDUT (the Oxford Literary and Debating Union Trust), and the Oxford Union Society was granted a licence to occupy the building.[21]

Several parts of what were historically the Union buildings and grounds were subsequently either sold or made the subject of long leases, including an area of land around the rear of the debating chamber, part of the Union cellars (adjoining that now occupied by the LGBTQ+ venue Plush[22]), and part of what was formerly the Steward's house (now occupied by the Landmark Trust[23]).

The creation of OLDUT secured the future of the Union's buildings such that even if the Oxford Union Society were to cease to be or fail financially the buildings would not be lost. OLDUT's principal sources of funds are private donations and grant funding (including from the Mitsubishi UFJ Trust Oxford Foundation), rent on investment property and hiring fees.[24] OLDUT uses these funds to provide financial support for the refurbishment and maintenance of the Union buildings and the operation of the Union's library and reading-rooms.[citation needed]

Buildings edit

The original Union buildings were designed by Benjamin Woodward and opened in 1857. The society soon outgrew these premises and commissioned Alfred Waterhouse to design a free-standing debating chamber in the gardens, which opened in 1879. This was about a decade after the completion of the Cambridge Union's premises (also designed by Waterhouse), and the exteriors of the two buildings are very similar.[citation needed]

 
The final extension, housing the Goodman Library (ground floor) and the Macmillan Room (1st floor)
 
The Old Library at night as viewed from the gallery.

The original Woodward debating chamber is now known as "The Old Library". The Old Library is best known for its Pre-Raphaelite paintings by Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Edward Burne-Jones and William Morris, referred to collectively as the Oxford Union murals. The current debating chamber and several further extensions to the main buildings were added over the next forty years. The final extension was designed in a conventional Gothic Revival style by Walter Mills and Thorpe, and built in 1910–11.[25] It provides the Macmillan Room (the Union dining room) and Snooker Room on the first floor above the Goodman Library, underneath which there are basement library stacks. The Union also consists of a Bar on the ground floor, the Gladstone Room (a reception room) and the Morris Room (a meeting room) on the first floor, and a Members' TV Room on the second (uppermost) floor, along with separate offices for the President, Librarian, Treasurer and Secretary.[citation needed]

Many of the rooms in the Union are named after figures from the Union's past, such as the Goodman Library with its oriel windows and the wood-panelled Macmillan Room with barrel ceiling. The buildings have gradually been added to with paintings and statues of past presidents and prominent members.[citation needed]

 
The Debating Chamber

The Old Library contains a fireplace situated in the middle of the floor with a concealed flue, a rare design of which only a handful of examples survive in the UK.[citation needed]

The debating chamber features busts of such notables as Roy Jenkins, Edward Heath, Michael Heseltine, George Curzon and William Gladstone. It is also home to a grand piano, known as the "Bartlet-Jones Piano" after the Oxford University Music Society president who found it dusty and forgotten in a cupboard in the Holywell Music Room and placed it on permanent loan to the Union. The piano was unveiled by Vladimir Ashkenazy who famously refused to play it in front of the packed chamber because he "had not warmed up". The despatch boxes which continue to be used in Union debates are modelled on those in the House of Commons and were offered to the House during World War II.[citation needed]

As recently as the 1970s the Oxford Union still provided a full silver service dining room for its members which, like its famous bar, was the afternoon and evening venue of choice for many of the university's leading undergraduate journalists and politicos. To be invited to dine at the large table in the bay window - the usual domain of the Union's president - was considered the acme of attainment in that particular sphere of the university. It was often said more plots were hatched around that particular table on a regular evening than in the Houses of Parliament on Bonfire Night.[26][27] Similarly, the Union's two libraries were extensively used by that same cadre of undergraduates (principally humanities students) who were rushing at the last minute to complete the obligatory weekly essay for their formal university education.

The Union's buildings were used as a location for each of the films Oxford Blues (1984) and The Madness of King George (1994).[28]

Debating edit

Debating at the Oxford Union takes two forms: competitive debating and chamber debating.

Competitive debating offers members of the Union debate workshops and a platform upon which to practise and improve their debating skills. The Union's best debaters compete internationally against other top debating societies, and the Oxford Union regularly fields successful teams at the World Universities Debating Championship (which the Union hosted in 1993) and the European Universities Debating Championship.

The Union also runs the Oxford Schools' Debating Competition and the Oxford Intervarsity Debating Competition, each of which attracts schools and universities from around the world, as well as running a number of internal debating competitions.[29][30] Oxford Schools' Debating Competition is the largest schools' competition in the world, with over one thousand teams entering each year.

There are chamber debates every Thursday evening during University terms. Experts[clarification needed] for the proposition and opposition present paper speeches to the house. Members have an opportunity to deliver brief speeches from the floor. Following the style of the British Parliament, a motion is moved to "divide the House" in order to vote. Members in the chamber vote on the proposition with their feet by exiting the hall through a door designed to model the voting lobbies of the House of Commons, the right-hand side being marked 'ayes' and the left-hand side 'noes'.[citation needed]

Oxford Union Society debates are filmed and licensed by Oxford Union Limited, a registered company controlled by the Oxford Union Society.[31] Oxford Union Limited runs a YouTube channel which has more than 1.8 million subscribers and has gained more than 250 million views across its videos.

Governance edit

The Oxford Union's general conduct and management is governed by the Standing Committee. The voting members are:[32]

  • The Junior Officers (The President, President-Elect, Junior Librarian, Junior Treasurer, Librarian-Elect, Treasurer-Elect, and the Secretary)
  • Six elected members
  • Any Ex-President within six terms of leaving office who has registered their vote
  • Any other Ex-Junior Officer within three terms of leaving office who has registered their vote

The non-voting members are:

  • The Returning Officer – responsible for the conduct of the Union's elections and for the interpretation of the Union's Rules and Standing Orders
  • The Chair of the Consultative Committee – responsible for logistics and facilitation of events
  • The Chair of the Debate Selection Committee – responsible for overseeing the debating wing of the Union
  • The Senior Officers (the Senior Librarian and the Senior Treasurer) – generally Oxford University academics and who must be members of the Union, responsible for supervising the Society's finances and libraries
  • The Union's Trustees

The Bursar, the Deputy Bursar and the Access Officers attend meetings of Standing Committee in an advisory capacity.[3]

Day-to-day management of the Union is partly conducted by professional staff, principally the Bursar, the Deputy Bursar and the House Manager.[3]

Elections edit

Elections are held to fill the offices of President-elect, Librarian-elect, Treasurer-elect and Secretary, as well as 6 positions on the Standing Committee and 11 positions on the Secretary's Committee.[33] In order to stand for election to the Secretary's Committee, members must make two speeches on different nights during the term they stand for election. For the other offices, candidates must have additionally made two such speeches in the previous term. Elections are always held on Friday of 7th Week of the university's Full Term.[3]

The election for the Chair of the Consultative Committee is held at the meeting of the Consultative Committee on Monday of 8th Week of each term. Only members who have attended four of the last eight meetings of the Consultative Committee may either stand for election as Chair or vote.[3]

The number of elected positions on Standing Committee was increased from 5 to 7 in Michael Li's term (Trinity 2017) and implemented in Chris Zabilowicz's term (Michaelmas 2017).[34] However, the number of elected positions was decreased back to 5 officers at the end of James Price's term (Hilary 2021) before being increased to six at the end of Molly Mantle's term. It remains an ongoing point of discussion within the Society.[35]

Students running for election usually stand as part of a team, known as slates, enabling voters to support a designated candidate for each position and increase each candidate's vote count.[36]

Controversies edit

1996: OJ Simpson edit

In May 1996 President Paul Kenward invited O. J. Simpson to address the union, his first public address since his October acquittal by a Los Angeles jury of murdering his ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ron Goldman in 1994. Speaking for 90 minutes in front of 1,300 students, Simpson spoke of racism in the Los Angeles Police Department, and said he was sorry for hitting his wife, Nicole.[37]

Paul Kenward had given O. J. Simpson assurances there would be no broadcast media at the union debate. However, Chris Philp, (now Conservative MP and then a second-year student at University College and features editor of the student magazine Cherwell), was fined £50 for selling a written transcript of the debate and helping to sell an audio cassette to TV stations.[38]

2007: David Irving / Nick Griffin debate edit

In November 2007, President Luke Tryl sparked controversy by inviting Holocaust denier David Irving and British National Party leader Nick Griffin to speak at a Union forum on the topic of free speech. The Student Population at a Council meeting voted to oppose the invitations.[39] Following this and protests by other student groups, a poll of the Union's members was taken and resulted in a two-to-one majority in favour of the invitations.[40]

On the evening of the planned debate several hundred protesters gathered outside the Union buildings, chanting anti-fascist slogans and later preventing guests and Union members from entering the premises. Around 20 protesters succeeded in breaching the poorly maintained security cordon and attempted to force their way through to the main chamber. Members of the waiting audience blocked access by pushing back against the chamber doors. After students were convinced to yield to the protesters by Union staff, a sit-in protest was staged in the debating chamber, preventing a full debate from occurring due to security concerns. Because of a lack of security personnel, a number of students from the audience eventually came to take on the responsibilities of controlling events, in one instance preventing a scuffle from breaking out between a protester and members of the audience, and eventually assisting police in herding protesters from the main hall. One student protester interviewed by BBC News reported that fellow protesters played 'jingles' on the piano and danced on the President's chair[41] though the truth of the latter assertion was seriously questioned by eyewitnesses. Smaller debates were eventually held with Irving and Griffin in separate rooms, amid criticism that the police and Union officials had not foreseen the degree of unrest which the controversial invitations would arouse.[42]

The President of Oxford University Student Union, Martin McCluskey, strongly criticised the decision to proceed with the debate, saying that providing Irving and Griffin with a platform for their extreme views afforded them undue legitimacy.[43] Following the event, some, including Oxford MP Evan Harris, criticised the No Platform Policy adopted by the Student Union.[44][45]

2015: Marine Le Pen edit

In February 2015, the Union invited Marine Le Pen, the leader of the Front National in France, to address the Union, in view of the popularity of the FN in the French polls at the time. This sparked considerable controversy, with allegations of Le Pen endorsing anti-Semitism and Islamophobia. The speech went ahead as planned, albeit delayed by the protesters blockading the Union's main entrance, and briefly breaking into the building.[46] In all, over 400 people turned up to the demonstration.[47] There was considerable controversy over OUSU's response, with allegations that OUSU had indirectly supported the protesters and not adequately condemned threats of violence against Union members who had attempted to attend the talk.[48]

2018: Heather Marsh edit

In 2018, human rights activist Heather Marsh accused the Oxford Union of censorship and violating a contractual obligation when they failed to post video of a "Whistleblowing" panel in which she appeared to the official Oxford Union YouTube channel, allegedly at the request of a fellow panelist, former CIA operative David Shedd.[49] Oxford Union president Gui Cavalcanti replied that its agreement with Marsh and other panelists gave them the right but not the obligation to publish video of any events, adding that "just this academic year, we’ve had multiple events not uploaded, ranging from J. J. Abrams to Sir Patrick Stewart."[50] A transcript of the panel and its 22-minute audio are available online.[49]

2019: Ebenezer Azamati edit

In October 2019, before the annual 'No Confidence' debate, blind Ghanaian graduate student Ebenezer Azamati was violently removed from the hall for refusing to relinquish his seat, which had been reserved for a committee member. Azmati later had his membership revoked for two terms for 'violent misconduct'. Footage of the event was recorded by another member, and was subsequently uploaded to the internet. This led to protests from the University's AfriSoc society on Azmati's behalf, and soon gained national news media coverage.[51] This was eventually followed by the resignation of standing committee members and other Union officials, and then by Union president Brendan McGrath on 19 November.[52] Azmati was compensated an undisclosed amount.[53]

2023: Kathleen Stock edit

In April 2023, the Union invited the gender-critical feminist philosopher Dr Kathleen Stock. The invitation was met with criticism from the University's LGBTQ+ Society and Student Union, who alleged Stock's views were transphobic and called upon the Union to rescind the invitation. The Union declined to disinvite Stock, saying in a statement that members would have the 'opportunity to respectfully engage and challenge' Stock. Letters both in support and in opposition to Stock's talk were published in national publications, signed by academics and students, and prompted intervention from Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, who told the Telegraph that 'University should be an environment where debate is supported, not stifled. We mustn’t allow a small but vocal few to shut down discussion. Kathleen Stock's invitation to the Oxford Union should stand'. Over a hundred protestors gathered outside the buildings on the day. The event went ahead, but shortly after it started, a protestor glued themselves to the floor of the Union's debating chamber before subsequently being removed by police. [54][55][56]

Retractions of speaker invitations edit

In a few notable cases the Union has withdrawn invitations to controversial speakers, as the result of public pressure, specific pressure by lobbyists, and concerns about safety.

1998: John Tyndall edit

A debate that was to have involved the far-right fascist leader John Tyndall was met with a campaign of resistance in 1998. This opposition, coupled with police advice following a series of racially motivated nail-bombings in London, resulted in the cancellation of the debate.[57]

2001: David Irving edit

An invitation to the writer and Holocaust denier David Irving to speak in a debate on censorship in 2001 was met by a coordinated campaign by left-wing, Jewish, and anti-fascist groups, together with the elected leadership of the Oxford University Student Union, to have the invitation withdrawn. Following a meeting of Union members, and a subsequent meeting of the Union's governing body, the Standing Committee, the President decided the debate would have to be cancelled.[58] However, Irving was allowed to speak at a Union debate in 2007.[59]

2009: Philip Nitschke edit

In March 2009, the Union withdrew an invitation to euthanasia campaigner Philip Nitschke after Nitschke had already accepted the invitation. Nitschke received a second e-mail cancelling the invitation "in the interests of there being a 'fair debate'", and was told other speakers were unwilling to speak alongside him.[60] The debate topic was the legalisation of assisted suicide, a field in which Nitschke is prominent. The reason given by Oxford Union President Corey Dixon was that two other speakers "disagree with his particular take on [assisted suicide]".[61] According to Dixon, the speakers who successfully pressured the Union to withdraw Nitschke's invitation were a member of the public, whose brother had undergone assisted death, and British euthanasia campaigner Michael Irwin.[61][62] However, Irwin denied that he had applied pressure to exclude Nitschke.[63]

The Oxford Union released a statement explaining the decision: "An administrative decision was made to ensure we had three speakers on each side of the debate, which was proving difficult due to Nitschke's attendance. It is always in the interests of the Oxford Union to ensure a balanced debate with as wide-ranging views as possible represented. There may have been miscommunication between the Oxford Union and Nitschke. We certainly hope that no offence has been caused. The Oxford Union is a politically-neutral institution and holds no opinion on Nitschke's views."[60]

Nitschke commented, "This famous society has a long tradition of championing free speech. To suggest that my views on end-of-life issues are inappropriate simply because I believe that all rational elderly adults should have access to the best end-of-life information beggars belief."[61] He also called the act "an almost unprecedented act of censorship".[64] Nitschke gave a series of lectures across the UK at the time the debate was held.[65]

Past officers edit

Notable past Presidents and Junior Officers of the Oxford Union include:

(MT = Michaelmas Term; HT = Hilary Term; TT = Trinity Term)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Burns, John F. "Oxford Union girds for far-right debate Protesters vow 'anti- fascist' rally", International Herald Tribune, 27 November 2007. Retrieved 20 January 2009.
  2. ^ a b Oxford Union Society Rules: Rule 69 "Independence"
  3. ^ a b c d e "The Oxford Union Society : Rules and Standing Orders" (PDF). Oxford-union.org. Retrieved 7 February 2020.
  4. ^ Cherry, Libby (15 July 2018). "SEXIST POLITICS, SILENCING, AND PREDATORY TUTORS: OXFORD FEMINISTS' BATTLE TO BE HEARD". Isis. Retrieved 15 April 2021. Before even arriving at Oxford, Okely vowed to get women into the Union as a point of principle. And two votes later, she was successful
  5. ^ a b "Centenary Women's Timeline". Oxford University. 2020. Retrieved 19 April 2021. On 9 February 1963, after years of campaigning, the Oxford Union Society – an important training ground for aspiring politicians – admitted women to full membership, after the required two-thirds majority was secured in a poll of members. Voting was 1,039 in favour and 427 against.
  6. ^ Maclean, Ruth (14 February 2013). "Gender Equality To Be Celebrated At Hilda's Festival". OxfordStudent.com. Retrieved 19 April 2021. The 'broad' line-up includes trans activist Jess Pumphrey, who succeeded in getting the amendment passed which allows women to wear trousers as part of sub fusc. Other trailblazing speakers include Professor Judith Okely, the first female member of the Oxford Union, the Very Reverend Dean Vivienne Faull, the first female Dean of the Church of England, and Professor Hermione Lee, now head of Wolfson College.
  7. ^ Ceadel, Martin (1979). "The 'King and Country' Debate, 1933: Student Politics, Pacifism and the Dictators". The Historical Journal. 22 (2): 397–422. doi:10.1017/s0018246x00016885. ISSN 0018-246X. S2CID 153490642.
  8. ^ Edward, Heath (1998). The course of my life : my autobiography. London: Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 978-0340708521. OCLC 40527130.
  9. ^ a b Smith, Eden. "Notable Debates at the Oxford Union". The Oxford Union. Retrieved 6 June 2023.
  10. ^ "BBC Programme Index". genome.ch.bbc.co.uk. 3 June 1975. Retrieved 18 November 2023.
  11. ^ Kevin McCarthy answers questions about the 2020 US Presidential election and saying no to Trump, retrieved 4 December 2023
  12. ^ Oxford Union Society Rules: Rule 3 "Membership of the Society" (a) "Life Members" (i) "Members of the University and Affiliates" (5)
  13. ^ Oxford Union Society Rules: Rule 3 "Membership of the Society" (a) "Life Members" (i)"Members of the University and Affiliates" (6)
  14. ^ Oxford Union Society Rules: Standing Order F7 "Institutions Admitted to the Benefits of Rule 3(c)" (a) "Course-length Membership" (i)
  15. ^ Oxford Union Society Rules: Standing Order F7 "Institutions Admitted to the Benefits of Rule 3(c)" (a) "Course-length Membership" (ii) "University Staff Members"
  16. ^ Oxford Union Society Rules: Standing Order F7 "Institutions Admitted to the Benefits of Rule 3(c)" (b) "Termly Membership"
  17. ^ Oxford Union Society Rules: Standing Order F7 "Institutions Admitted to the Benefits of Rule 3(c)" (c) "Permanent Membership"
  18. ^ Oxford Union Society Rules: Standing Order F7 "Institutions Admitted to the Benefits of Rule 3(c)" (d) "Visiting Members"
  19. ^ Oxford Union Society Rules: Rule 3 "Membership of the Society", (b) "Residential Members"
  20. ^ Oxford Literary Debating Union Trust: Paragraph 3
  21. ^ "Charity Details". beta.charitycommission.gov.uk. Retrieved 14 December 2018.
  22. ^ Gould, Tom (26 November 2018). "Plush to move into Purple Turtle cellar". The Oxford Student. Retrieved 14 December 2018.
  23. ^ "Holiday at The Steward's House, St Michael's Street, Oxford | The Landmark Trust". www.landmarktrust.org.uk. Retrieved 14 December 2018.
  24. ^ "THE OXFORD LITERARY AND DEBATING UNION CHARITABLE TRUST Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30th June 2017" (PDF). Charity Commission. 5 April 2018. Retrieved 14 December 2018.
  25. ^ Sherwood, Jennifer; Pevsner, Nikolaus (1974). Oxfordshire. The Buildings of England. Harmondsworth: Penguin Books. p. 273. ISBN 978-0-14-071045-8.
  26. ^ Walter, David (1984). The Oxford Union : playground of power. London: Macdonald. ISBN 978-0356095028. OCLC 11311550.
  27. ^ Caroline, Graham, Fiona (2005). Playing at politics : an ethnography of the Oxford Union. Edinburgh: Dunedin Academic Press. ISBN 978-1281232168. OCLC 647824828.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  28. ^ Bill, Leonard (July 2004). The Oxford of Inspector Morse : films, locations, history. Dexter, Colin. Oxford. ISBN 978-0954767105. OCLC 55906804.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  29. ^ "Oxford IV". www.oxfordiv.com. Retrieved 14 December 2018.
  30. ^ "Oxford Schools". oxfordschools. Retrieved 14 December 2018.
  31. ^ "Oxford Union Limited Director's Report and Financial Statements For The Period Ended 30 June 2016". 23 March 2017. Retrieved 14 December 2018.
  32. ^ "The Oxford Union Website -The Standing Committee". The Oxford Union Site. 11 June 2021. Retrieved 11 June 2021.
  33. ^ "The Standing Committee - the Oxford Union". www.oxford-union.org.
  34. ^ Pope, Jack Hunter and Felix (21 October 2017). "Investigation launched into Union president's alleged rule breach". Cherwell. Retrieved 14 December 2018.
  35. ^ "Oxford Union cuts standing committee to five officers". Cherwell. 11 February 2021. Retrieved 20 February 2021.
  36. ^ Roller, Matthew (24 November 2017). "Public schoolboys dominate Union election - Cherwell".
  37. ^ Lyall, Sarah (15 May 1996). "O.J. Simpson at Oxford: Some Aye Votes by Students, Some Nay". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 14 December 2018.
  38. ^ "Student fined for OJ tape sale". The Independent. 30 May 1996. Archived from the original on 24 May 2022.
  39. ^ . 10 November 2007. Archived from the original on 10 November 2007.
  40. ^ "University faces 'bigots and martyrs' debate row. - Yorkshire Post (Leeds, England) - Encyclopedia.com". Retrieved 7 June 2023.
  41. ^ BBC Media Player. Bbc.co.uk. Retrieved on 2013-07-15.
  42. ^ Taylor, Matthew (27 November 2007). "Irving and Griffin spark fury at Oxford Union debate". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 20 May 2010.
  43. ^ . Archived from the original on 17 June 2008.
  44. ^ Editorial (26 October 2007). "Editorial". Cherwell. Retrieved 14 December 2018.
  45. ^ Wilson, Fiona (26 November 2007). "Oxford MP Evan Harris Speaks Out Against No Platform Policy". Cherwell. Retrieved 14 December 2018.
  46. ^ Jon Henley (5 February 2015). "Marine Le Pen's Oxford university speech delayed by protesters". The Guardian.
  47. ^ "Marine Le Pen protest divides Oxford". Cherwell.org. 6 February 2015.
  48. ^ ""I now hate OUSU": Colleges react to Le Pen protesters". Cherwell.org. 13 February 2015.
  49. ^ a b "Irony: Oxford Union Won't Release Video of Whistleblowing Panel". The Public. 31 May 2018.
  50. ^ Baker, Oscar (17 June 2018). "Union denies censoring whistleblowing panel video". Cherwell.org. Retrieved 27 July 2021. However, Union president Gui Cavalcanti ...told Cherwell: 'We are in no breach of contract, nor is it "departure from common practice" for our events not to be uploaded to our YouTube channel – just this academic year, we've had multiple events not uploaded, ranging from J. J. Abrams to Sir Patrick Stewart.'
  51. ^ "Blind student 'violently' pulled from Oxford Union". BBC News. 18 November 2019. Retrieved 19 November 2019.
  52. ^ Heslop, Lois (19 November 2019). "Union President resigns". Cherwell. Retrieved 19 November 2019.
  53. ^ "Oxford Union: Blind student removed from debate compensated". BBC News. 2 September 2020. Retrieved 9 February 2021.
  54. ^ "Kathleen Stock: Protests at Oxford Union as talk goes ahead". BBC. 30 May 2023. Retrieved 7 June 2023.
  55. ^ "Protester glues themself to the floor of the chamber during Stock's Union address". herwell.org. 30 May 2023. Retrieved 7 June 2023.
  56. ^ Hancock, Charlie (29 May 2023). "Stock should speak at the Union, says Rishi Sunak". herwell.org. Retrieved 7 June 2023.
  57. ^ "Racism debate scrapped after bombings". BBC News. London. 27 April 1999. Retrieved 9 April 2009.
  58. ^ "Oxford drops Hitler historian debate". 9 May 2001. Retrieved 14 December 2018.
  59. ^ Taylor, Matthew (27 November 2007). "Irving and Griffin spark fury at Oxford Union debate". London: guardian.co.uk. Retrieved 9 April 2009.
  60. ^ a b . latestnews.virginmedia.com. Archived from the original on 12 May 2009. Retrieved 20 June 2009.
  61. ^ a b c "Nitschke snubbed by Oxford debaters". smh.com.au. 31 March 2009. Retrieved 9 April 2009.
  62. ^ "Euthanasia advocate Philip Nitschke snubbed by Oxford Union debaters". www.news.com.au. 31 March 2009. Retrieved 10 May 2009.
  63. ^ Alderson, Andrew (9 May 2009). . London: telegraph.co.uk. Archived from the original on 13 May 2009. Retrieved 10 May 2009.
  64. ^ "The Press Association: Doctor accuses union of censorship". Retrieved 9 April 2009.
  65. ^ "Dozens attend euthanasia workshop". BBC News. 5 May 2009. Retrieved 10 May 2009.
  66. ^ Smith (1989); p. 180-184
  67. ^ Martin Pugh, ‘Monckton, Walter Turner, first Viscount Monckton of Brenchley (1891–1965)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2011 accessed 8 July 2013

External links edit

  • Official website

51°45′11″N 1°15′35″W / 51.75306°N 1.25972°W / 51.75306; -1.25972

oxford, union, confused, with, oxford, university, student, union, society, commonly, referred, debating, society, city, oxford, whose, membership, drawn, primarily, from, university, oxford, founded, 1823, britain, oldest, university, unions, world, most, pre. Not to be confused with Oxford University Student Union The Oxford Union Society commonly referred to as the Oxford Union is a debating society in the city of Oxford UK whose membership is drawn primarily from the University of Oxford Founded in 1823 it is one of Britain s oldest university unions and one of the world s most prestigious private students societies 1 The Oxford Union exists independently from the university 2 and is distinct from the Oxford University Student Union The Oxford Union SocietyThe Oxford Union Society s crestFormation1823TypeStudent debating unionHeadquartersOxford EnglandLocationFrewin Court Oxford OX1 3JBPresidentHannah Edwards Lincoln College AffiliationsWorld Universities Debating CouncilWebsiteoxford union wbr orgThe Oxford Union has a tradition of hosting some of the world s most prominent individuals across politics academia and popular culture ranging from Albert Einstein and Michael Jackson to Sir Winston Churchill Ronald Reagan Queen Elizabeth II and Mahathir Mohamad Many former Presidents of the Union have gone on to hold high office in the UK and Commonwealth including William Gladstone Ted Heath Boris Johnson and Benazir Bhutto Contents 1 History and status 1 1 Genesis 1 2 Status 1 3 Women members 2 Notable debates 2 1 1933 King and Country Debate 2 2 1964 Extremism Debate 2 3 1975 EEC Membership 2 4 1985 Nuclear Armament 3 Notable speakers 4 Membership 5 The Union buildings 5 1 OLDUT 5 2 Buildings 6 Debating 7 Governance 7 1 Elections 8 Controversies 8 1 1996 OJ Simpson 8 2 2007 David Irving Nick Griffin debate 8 3 2015 Marine Le Pen 8 4 2018 Heather Marsh 8 5 2019 Ebenezer Azamati 8 6 2023 Kathleen Stock 9 Retractions of speaker invitations 9 1 1998 John Tyndall 9 2 2001 David Irving 9 3 2009 Philip Nitschke 10 Past officers 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksHistory and status editGenesis edit The Oxford Union was founded as an independent forum for unrestricted debate by junior members of Oxford University in 1823 At the time the University prohibited junior members from discussing certain issues such as matters of theology Although restrictions of speech within the University have since been lifted the Oxford Union has remained separate from and independent of the university and is constitutionally bound to remain so The first meeting of the Society was held illegally in a room in Peckwater Quad at Christ Church The first recorded debate was about Parliamentarianism vs Royalism during the English Civil War By the late 1820s the Oxford Union was established enough to have regular elections a growing collection of books and formalised relations with its sister society The Cambridge Union In the early 1830s the Union held its first debate on having confidence in HM Government a tradition that is continued to this day As the Society developed it bought a plot of land by Frewin Court in central Oxford and commissioned Benjamin Woodward who was then working on the University Museum to design new buildings for the Society s use These initial buildings opened in 1857 included the original debating chamber By the 1870s the Society had grown too large for the chamber and commissioned a new chamber by Alfred Waterhouse Finished in 1878 and opened the following year the Union s new Debating Chamber was the largest purpose built debating chamber in the world The original chamber became the Society s library and is now home to over 60 000 volumes A further period of building began in the early 1900s when an extension was built between the Steward s House and the main premises of the Society 2 Status edit The Oxford Union is an unincorporated association its property is held in trust in favour of its objectives and members and governed by its rules which form a multipartite contract between the members 3 Its members are almost exclusively drawn from the University of Oxford with some provision for members who are resident in Oxford or attend Oxford Brookes University Women members edit Until 1963 women were excluded from membership of the Oxford Union The admission of women to the Union required a 2 3 vote of its past and current members The first vote to admit women failed with 903 men voting to admit women and 459 voting against 4 The second vote on 9 February 1963 succeeded 1 039 to 427 5 Oxford student Judith Okely who had led the campaign to admit women then became the first woman member 6 Geraldine Jones of St Hugh s College was in 1967 the first woman to be elected President of the Oxford Union 5 Notable debates edit1933 King and Country Debate edit Main article The King and Country debate The Oxford Union has long associated itself with freedom of speech most famously by debating and passing the motion This House would under no circumstances fight for its King and country in 1933 The debate polarized opinion across the country with the Daily Telegraph running an article headlined DISLOYALTY AT OXFORD GESTURE TOWARDS THE REDS 7 Several prominent Union members including Randolph Churchill tried to expunge this motion and the result of the debate from the Union s minute book This attempt was defeated in a meeting more attended than the original debate Sir Edward Heath records in his memoirs that Churchill was then chased around Oxford by undergraduates who intended to debag him i e humiliate him by removing his trousers and was then fined by the police for being illegally parked 8 1964 Extremism Debate edit In 1964 the Oxford Union invited American civil rights activist Malcolm X to speak on the motion This House Believes Extremism in Defence of Liberty is no Vice Moderation in the Pursuit of Justice is no Virtue 9 1975 EEC Membership edit In 1975 the Union debated the motion This House Would Say Yes to Europe with Conservative Leader Ted Heath Liberal Party leader Jeremy Thorpe and senior Labour cabinet minister Barbara Castle speaking in the debate It was televised live by the BBC shortly before the referendum in June 3rd 1975 10 1985 Nuclear Armament edit In 1985 David Lange Prime Minister of New Zealand debated against the American evangelist the Revd Jerry Falwell the motion This House Believes Nuclear Weapons are Morally Indefensible 9 Notable speakers editThe Union puts on a wide variety of events for its members but is best known for its Thursday night debates and individual speaker events In both of these leading figures from public life are invited to discuss something of interest to the membership Amongst the earliest individual addresses made to the Union were speeches given by Lord Randolph Churchill at the start of the 20th Century and Millicent Fawcett who became the first woman to address the Oxford Union in 1908 Since then notable speakers to have addressed the members of the Oxford Union include Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II UK Prime Ministers Herbert Asquith David Lloyd George Neville Chamberlain Winston Churchill Clement Attlee Harold Macmillan Ted Heath Margaret Thatcher John Major Gordon Brown David Cameron Theresa May and Boris Johnson US Presidents Ronald Reagan Jimmy Carter and Richard Nixon US Secretaries of State Henry Kissinger Madeleine Albright John Kerry and Colin Powell Several US Senators including Robert Kennedy Bernie Sanders and John McCain Speakers of the US House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi Newt Gingrich and Kevin McCarthy 11 The first Prime Minister of India Jawaharlal Nehru Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto Libyan leader Muammar al Gaddafi The spiritual leader of Tibet The Dalai Lama German Chancellor Helmut Kohl French Presidential candidate Marine La Pen American athlete O J Simpson Nobel Peace Prize winners F W de Klerk Lech Walesa Malala Yousafzai Desmond Tutu Yasser Arafat and Mother Teresa Australian Prime Ministers Malcolm Turnbull Tony Abbott Kevin Rudd Paul Keating and Bob Hawke New Zealand Prime Ministers John Key David Lange and Mike Moore Scientists including Albert Einstein Buzz Aldrin Richard Dawkins and Stephen Hawking Musicians including Elton John Billy Joel Michael Jackson Shakira and James Blunt Actors including Morgan Freeman Tom Hanks Judi Dench Bryan Cranston Ian McKellen Emma Watson Clint Eastwood and Roger MooreMembership editMembership of the Oxford Union falls into four classes life membership long term membership temporary membership and residential membership Temporary membership can take four forms course length membership termly membership visiting membership and confusingly permanent membership The overwhelming majority of members are life members the criterion for membership is being a fully matriculated member of the University of Oxford or a member of one of the Union s kindred societies namely Cambridge Union Durham Union Conference Olivant Trinity College Dublin s University Philosophical Society Yale Political Union Harvard Political UnionAll those eligible for life membership can instead apply for long term membership for a period of at least the duration of their course 12 and all such long term members can while eligible apply to transfer to life membership 13 Students at certain other educational institutions in Oxford most notably Oxford Brookes University are entitled to join for the duration of their course 14 Shorter membership is also extended to staff members of the University of Oxford or of any of its colleges or permanent private halls 15 Members of a number of other institutions together with those participating in some visiting study programmes in Oxford are also eligible to apply for temporary membership 16 while members of Oxford Brookes University alone are entitled to apply for permanent membership 17 Guests staying at the Oxford Union Society Landmark Trust flat in the Old Steward s House are deemed to be visiting members of the Society for the duration of their stay in the flat 18 Residential memberships are available to Oxford residents who are not from the university but only if they are deemed worthy by a full meeting of the Union s Standing Committee after submitting a written application to the Secretary and subsequent interview by a member of the Standing Committee 19 The Union buildings editThe Oxford Union buildings are located in Frewin Court off Cornmarket Street and on St Michael s Street and are owned by a separate charitable trust the Oxford Literary and Debating Union Trust OLDUT 20 OLDUT edit The Oxford Union was never financially secure and had a significant level of historic debt associated with the erection of its buildings Following a particularly bad period in the 1970s the Union buildings were sold to OLDUT the Oxford Literary and Debating Union Trust and the Oxford Union Society was granted a licence to occupy the building 21 Several parts of what were historically the Union buildings and grounds were subsequently either sold or made the subject of long leases including an area of land around the rear of the debating chamber part of the Union cellars adjoining that now occupied by the LGBTQ venue Plush 22 and part of what was formerly the Steward s house now occupied by the Landmark Trust 23 The creation of OLDUT secured the future of the Union s buildings such that even if the Oxford Union Society were to cease to be or fail financially the buildings would not be lost OLDUT s principal sources of funds are private donations and grant funding including from the Mitsubishi UFJ Trust Oxford Foundation rent on investment property and hiring fees 24 OLDUT uses these funds to provide financial support for the refurbishment and maintenance of the Union buildings and the operation of the Union s library and reading rooms citation needed Buildings edit The original Union buildings were designed by Benjamin Woodward and opened in 1857 The society soon outgrew these premises and commissioned Alfred Waterhouse to design a free standing debating chamber in the gardens which opened in 1879 This was about a decade after the completion of the Cambridge Union s premises also designed by Waterhouse and the exteriors of the two buildings are very similar citation needed nbsp The final extension housing the Goodman Library ground floor and the Macmillan Room 1st floor nbsp The Old Library at night as viewed from the gallery The original Woodward debating chamber is now known as The Old Library The Old Library is best known for its Pre Raphaelite paintings by Dante Gabriel Rossetti Edward Burne Jones and William Morris referred to collectively as the Oxford Union murals The current debating chamber and several further extensions to the main buildings were added over the next forty years The final extension was designed in a conventional Gothic Revival style by Walter Mills and Thorpe and built in 1910 11 25 It provides the Macmillan Room the Union dining room and Snooker Room on the first floor above the Goodman Library underneath which there are basement library stacks The Union also consists of a Bar on the ground floor the Gladstone Room a reception room and the Morris Room a meeting room on the first floor and a Members TV Room on the second uppermost floor along with separate offices for the President Librarian Treasurer and Secretary citation needed Many of the rooms in the Union are named after figures from the Union s past such as the Goodman Library with its oriel windows and the wood panelled Macmillan Room with barrel ceiling The buildings have gradually been added to with paintings and statues of past presidents and prominent members citation needed nbsp The Debating ChamberThe Old Library contains a fireplace situated in the middle of the floor with a concealed flue a rare design of which only a handful of examples survive in the UK citation needed The debating chamber features busts of such notables as Roy Jenkins Edward Heath Michael Heseltine George Curzon and William Gladstone It is also home to a grand piano known as the Bartlet Jones Piano after the Oxford University Music Society president who found it dusty and forgotten in a cupboard in the Holywell Music Room and placed it on permanent loan to the Union The piano was unveiled by Vladimir Ashkenazy who famously refused to play it in front of the packed chamber because he had not warmed up The despatch boxes which continue to be used in Union debates are modelled on those in the House of Commons and were offered to the House during World War II citation needed As recently as the 1970s the Oxford Union still provided a full silver service dining room for its members which like its famous bar was the afternoon and evening venue of choice for many of the university s leading undergraduate journalists and politicos To be invited to dine at the large table in the bay window the usual domain of the Union s president was considered the acme of attainment in that particular sphere of the university It was often said more plots were hatched around that particular table on a regular evening than in the Houses of Parliament on Bonfire Night 26 27 Similarly the Union s two libraries were extensively used by that same cadre of undergraduates principally humanities students who were rushing at the last minute to complete the obligatory weekly essay for their formal university education The Union s buildings were used as a location for each of the films Oxford Blues 1984 and The Madness of King George 1994 28 Debating editDebating at the Oxford Union takes two forms competitive debating and chamber debating Competitive debating offers members of the Union debate workshops and a platform upon which to practise and improve their debating skills The Union s best debaters compete internationally against other top debating societies and the Oxford Union regularly fields successful teams at the World Universities Debating Championship which the Union hosted in 1993 and the European Universities Debating Championship The Union also runs the Oxford Schools Debating Competition and the Oxford Intervarsity Debating Competition each of which attracts schools and universities from around the world as well as running a number of internal debating competitions 29 30 Oxford Schools Debating Competition is the largest schools competition in the world with over one thousand teams entering each year There are chamber debates every Thursday evening during University terms Experts clarification needed for the proposition and opposition present paper speeches to the house Members have an opportunity to deliver brief speeches from the floor Following the style of the British Parliament a motion is moved to divide the House in order to vote Members in the chamber vote on the proposition with their feet by exiting the hall through a door designed to model the voting lobbies of the House of Commons the right hand side being marked ayes and the left hand side noes citation needed Oxford Union Society debates are filmed and licensed by Oxford Union Limited a registered company controlled by the Oxford Union Society 31 Oxford Union Limited runs a YouTube channel which has more than 1 8 million subscribers and has gained more than 250 million views across its videos Governance editThe Oxford Union s general conduct and management is governed by the Standing Committee The voting members are 32 The Junior Officers The President President Elect Junior Librarian Junior Treasurer Librarian Elect Treasurer Elect and the Secretary Six elected members Any Ex President within six terms of leaving office who has registered their vote Any other Ex Junior Officer within three terms of leaving office who has registered their voteThe non voting members are The Returning Officer responsible for the conduct of the Union s elections and for the interpretation of the Union s Rules and Standing Orders The Chair of the Consultative Committee responsible for logistics and facilitation of events The Chair of the Debate Selection Committee responsible for overseeing the debating wing of the Union The Senior Officers the Senior Librarian and the Senior Treasurer generally Oxford University academics and who must be members of the Union responsible for supervising the Society s finances and libraries The Union s TrusteesThe Bursar the Deputy Bursar and the Access Officers attend meetings of Standing Committee in an advisory capacity 3 Day to day management of the Union is partly conducted by professional staff principally the Bursar the Deputy Bursar and the House Manager 3 Elections edit Elections are held to fill the offices of President elect Librarian elect Treasurer elect and Secretary as well as 6 positions on the Standing Committee and 11 positions on the Secretary s Committee 33 In order to stand for election to the Secretary s Committee members must make two speeches on different nights during the term they stand for election For the other offices candidates must have additionally made two such speeches in the previous term Elections are always held on Friday of 7th Week of the university s Full Term 3 The election for the Chair of the Consultative Committee is held at the meeting of the Consultative Committee on Monday of 8th Week of each term Only members who have attended four of the last eight meetings of the Consultative Committee may either stand for election as Chair or vote 3 The number of elected positions on Standing Committee was increased from 5 to 7 in Michael Li s term Trinity 2017 and implemented in Chris Zabilowicz s term Michaelmas 2017 34 However the number of elected positions was decreased back to 5 officers at the end of James Price s term Hilary 2021 before being increased to six at the end of Molly Mantle s term It remains an ongoing point of discussion within the Society 35 Students running for election usually stand as part of a team known as slates enabling voters to support a designated candidate for each position and increase each candidate s vote count 36 Controversies edit1996 OJ Simpson edit In May 1996 President Paul Kenward invited O J Simpson to address the union his first public address since his October acquittal by a Los Angeles jury of murdering his ex wife Nicole Brown Simpson and her friend Ron Goldman in 1994 Speaking for 90 minutes in front of 1 300 students Simpson spoke of racism in the Los Angeles Police Department and said he was sorry for hitting his wife Nicole 37 Paul Kenward had given O J Simpson assurances there would be no broadcast media at the union debate However Chris Philp now Conservative MP and then a second year student at University College and features editor of the student magazine Cherwell was fined 50 for selling a written transcript of the debate and helping to sell an audio cassette to TV stations 38 2007 David Irving Nick Griffin debate edit In November 2007 President Luke Tryl sparked controversy by inviting Holocaust denier David Irving and British National Party leader Nick Griffin to speak at a Union forum on the topic of free speech The Student Population at a Council meeting voted to oppose the invitations 39 Following this and protests by other student groups a poll of the Union s members was taken and resulted in a two to one majority in favour of the invitations 40 On the evening of the planned debate several hundred protesters gathered outside the Union buildings chanting anti fascist slogans and later preventing guests and Union members from entering the premises Around 20 protesters succeeded in breaching the poorly maintained security cordon and attempted to force their way through to the main chamber Members of the waiting audience blocked access by pushing back against the chamber doors After students were convinced to yield to the protesters by Union staff a sit in protest was staged in the debating chamber preventing a full debate from occurring due to security concerns Because of a lack of security personnel a number of students from the audience eventually came to take on the responsibilities of controlling events in one instance preventing a scuffle from breaking out between a protester and members of the audience and eventually assisting police in herding protesters from the main hall One student protester interviewed by BBC News reported that fellow protesters played jingles on the piano and danced on the President s chair 41 though the truth of the latter assertion was seriously questioned by eyewitnesses Smaller debates were eventually held with Irving and Griffin in separate rooms amid criticism that the police and Union officials had not foreseen the degree of unrest which the controversial invitations would arouse 42 The President of Oxford University Student Union Martin McCluskey strongly criticised the decision to proceed with the debate saying that providing Irving and Griffin with a platform for their extreme views afforded them undue legitimacy 43 Following the event some including Oxford MP Evan Harris criticised the No Platform Policy adopted by the Student Union 44 45 2015 Marine Le Pen edit In February 2015 the Union invited Marine Le Pen the leader of the Front National in France to address the Union in view of the popularity of the FN in the French polls at the time This sparked considerable controversy with allegations of Le Pen endorsing anti Semitism and Islamophobia The speech went ahead as planned albeit delayed by the protesters blockading the Union s main entrance and briefly breaking into the building 46 In all over 400 people turned up to the demonstration 47 There was considerable controversy over OUSU s response with allegations that OUSU had indirectly supported the protesters and not adequately condemned threats of violence against Union members who had attempted to attend the talk 48 2018 Heather Marsh edit In 2018 human rights activist Heather Marsh accused the Oxford Union of censorship and violating a contractual obligation when they failed to post video of a Whistleblowing panel in which she appeared to the official Oxford Union YouTube channel allegedly at the request of a fellow panelist former CIA operative David Shedd 49 Oxford Union president Gui Cavalcanti replied that its agreement with Marsh and other panelists gave them the right but not the obligation to publish video of any events adding that just this academic year we ve had multiple events not uploaded ranging from J J Abrams to Sir Patrick Stewart 50 A transcript of the panel and its 22 minute audio are available online 49 2019 Ebenezer Azamati edit In October 2019 before the annual No Confidence debate blind Ghanaian graduate student Ebenezer Azamati was violently removed from the hall for refusing to relinquish his seat which had been reserved for a committee member Azmati later had his membership revoked for two terms for violent misconduct Footage of the event was recorded by another member and was subsequently uploaded to the internet This led to protests from the University s AfriSoc society on Azmati s behalf and soon gained national news media coverage 51 This was eventually followed by the resignation of standing committee members and other Union officials and then by Union president Brendan McGrath on 19 November 52 Azmati was compensated an undisclosed amount 53 2023 Kathleen Stock edit In April 2023 the Union invited the gender critical feminist philosopher Dr Kathleen Stock The invitation was met with criticism from the University s LGBTQ Society and Student Union who alleged Stock s views were transphobic and called upon the Union to rescind the invitation The Union declined to disinvite Stock saying in a statement that members would have the opportunity to respectfully engage and challenge Stock Letters both in support and in opposition to Stock s talk were published in national publications signed by academics and students and prompted intervention from Prime Minister Rishi Sunak who told the Telegraph that University should be an environment where debate is supported not stifled We mustn t allow a small but vocal few to shut down discussion Kathleen Stock s invitation to the Oxford Union should stand Over a hundred protestors gathered outside the buildings on the day The event went ahead but shortly after it started a protestor glued themselves to the floor of the Union s debating chamber before subsequently being removed by police 54 55 56 Retractions of speaker invitations editIn a few notable cases the Union has withdrawn invitations to controversial speakers as the result of public pressure specific pressure by lobbyists and concerns about safety 1998 John Tyndall edit A debate that was to have involved the far right fascist leader John Tyndall was met with a campaign of resistance in 1998 This opposition coupled with police advice following a series of racially motivated nail bombings in London resulted in the cancellation of the debate 57 2001 David Irving edit An invitation to the writer and Holocaust denier David Irving to speak in a debate on censorship in 2001 was met by a coordinated campaign by left wing Jewish and anti fascist groups together with the elected leadership of the Oxford University Student Union to have the invitation withdrawn Following a meeting of Union members and a subsequent meeting of the Union s governing body the Standing Committee the President decided the debate would have to be cancelled 58 However Irving was allowed to speak at a Union debate in 2007 59 2009 Philip Nitschke edit In March 2009 the Union withdrew an invitation to euthanasia campaigner Philip Nitschke after Nitschke had already accepted the invitation Nitschke received a second e mail cancelling the invitation in the interests of there being a fair debate and was told other speakers were unwilling to speak alongside him 60 The debate topic was the legalisation of assisted suicide a field in which Nitschke is prominent The reason given by Oxford Union President Corey Dixon was that two other speakers disagree with his particular take on assisted suicide 61 According to Dixon the speakers who successfully pressured the Union to withdraw Nitschke s invitation were a member of the public whose brother had undergone assisted death and British euthanasia campaigner Michael Irwin 61 62 However Irwin denied that he had applied pressure to exclude Nitschke 63 The Oxford Union released a statement explaining the decision An administrative decision was made to ensure we had three speakers on each side of the debate which was proving difficult due to Nitschke s attendance It is always in the interests of the Oxford Union to ensure a balanced debate with as wide ranging views as possible represented There may have been miscommunication between the Oxford Union and Nitschke We certainly hope that no offence has been caused The Oxford Union is a politically neutral institution and holds no opinion on Nitschke s views 60 Nitschke commented This famous society has a long tradition of championing free speech To suggest that my views on end of life issues are inappropriate simply because I believe that all rational elderly adults should have access to the best end of life information beggars belief 61 He also called the act an almost unprecedented act of censorship 64 Nitschke gave a series of lectures across the UK at the time the debate was held 65 Past officers editNotable past Presidents and Junior Officers of the Oxford Union include Eric Anthony Abrahams Cabinet minister in Jamaica President MT 1964 Jonathan Aitken UK Cabinet minister 1992 95 Librarian Tariq Ali author President TT 1965 H H Asquith UK Prime Minister President TT 1874 Lalith Athulathmudali Cabinet minister in Sri Lanka President HT 1958 S W R D Bandaranaike Prime Minister of Ceylon 1956 1959 Treasurer TT 1924 Ruzwana Bashir entrepreneur President MT 2004 Hilaire Belloc author President HT 1895 Michael Beloff barrister President of Trinity College Oxford President MT 1962 Benazir Bhutto Prime Minister of Pakistan President HT 1977 Gyles Brandreth UK Member of Parliament comedian President MT 1969 John Buchan author President HT 1899 Anthony Crosland UK Foreign Secretary President TT 1946 Edwina Currie UK Government minister Librarian Lord Curzon UK Foreign Secretary 1919 24 President MT 1880 Robin Day BBC Presenter President TT 1950 Lord James Douglas Hamilton Junior Scottish minister 1987 97 President TT 1964 Michael Foot Labour leader President MT 1933 Paul Foot journalist dep ed Private Eye President TT 1961 William Ewart Gladstone UK Prime Minister President MT 1830 Michael Gove UK Cabinet Minister President HT 1988 Sam Gyimah UK Member of Parliament President MT 1997 William Hague UK Foreign Secretary President MT 1981 Denis Healey UK Chancellor of the Exchequer Librarian Edward Heath UK Prime Minister President HT 1939 Michael Heseltine UK Deputy Prime Minister President MT 1954 Damian Hinds UK Member of Parliament President TT 1991 Douglas Hogg UK Cabinet minister President MT 1965 Quentin Hogg Lord Hailsham UK Lord Chancellor President TT 1929 Christopher Hollis UK Member of Parliament President MT 1923 Anthony Howard journalist President TT 1955 Jeremy Isaacs TV executive President HT 1955 Peter Jay journalist Chairman of OLDUT Trustees President TT 1960 Roy Jenkins UK Chancellor of the Exchequer Librarian Boris Johnson UK Prime Minister President TT 1986 Humayun Kabir Indian politician Librarian 1931 Lakshman Kadirgamar Minister of Foreign Affairs of Sri Lanka 1994 2001 President HT 1959 Uwe Kitzinger head of INSEAD citation needed Founder of Templeton College citation needed President HT 1950 Cosmo Gordon Lang Archbishop of Canterbury President MT 1884 David Lewis Canadian Member of Parliament 66 President HT 1934 Harold Macmillan UK Prime Minister Librarian Henry Edward Manning Archbishop of Westminster 1865 1892 President MT 1829 Philip May husband of UK Prime Minister President TT 1979 Louise Mensch UK Member of Parliament Secretary 1991 Viscount Monckton 67 UK Cabinet minister 1951 57 President HT 1913 Nicky Morgan UK Education Secretary Treasurer John Playfair Price UK diplomat President TT 1927 Julian Priestley Secretary General of the European Parliament 1997 2007 President HT 1972 Jacob Rees Mogg UK Member of Parliament Librarian 1990 William Rees Mogg Editor of The Times President TT 1951 Andrew Rowe UK Member of Parliament Librarian 3rd Marquess of Salisbury UK Prime Minister Secretary MT 1848 F E Smith Lord Birkenhead UK Lord Chancellor President TT 1894 Montek Singh Ahluwalia economist IMF President MT 1966 Andrew Sullivan political commentator President TT 1983 William Temple Archbishop of Canterbury President HT 1904 Jeremy Thorpe UK Liberal leader President HT 1951 Tony Benn UK Cabinet minister President TT 1947 Ann Widdecombe UK Member of Parliament Secretary 1971 Treasurer 1972 MT Michaelmas Term HT Hilary Term TT Trinity Term See also editList of presidents of the Oxford Union Cambridge Union Durham Union Olivaint Conference of BelgiumReferences edit Burns John F Oxford Union girds for far right debate Protesters vow anti fascist rally International Herald Tribune 27 November 2007 Retrieved 20 January 2009 a b Oxford Union Society Rules Rule 69 Independence a b c d e The Oxford Union Society Rules and Standing Orders PDF Oxford union org Retrieved 7 February 2020 Cherry Libby 15 July 2018 SEXIST POLITICS SILENCING AND PREDATORY TUTORS OXFORD FEMINISTS BATTLE TO BE HEARD Isis Retrieved 15 April 2021 Before even arriving at Oxford Okely vowed to get women into the Union as a point of principle And two votes later she was successful a b Centenary Women s Timeline Oxford University 2020 Retrieved 19 April 2021 On 9 February 1963 after years of campaigning the Oxford Union Society an important training ground for aspiring politicians admitted women to full membership after the required two thirds majority was secured in a poll of members Voting was 1 039 in favour and 427 against Maclean Ruth 14 February 2013 Gender Equality To Be Celebrated At Hilda s Festival OxfordStudent com Retrieved 19 April 2021 The broad line up includes trans activist Jess Pumphrey who succeeded in getting the amendment passed which allows women to wear trousers as part of sub fusc Other trailblazing speakers include Professor Judith Okely the first female member of the Oxford Union the Very Reverend Dean Vivienne Faull the first female Dean of the Church of England and Professor Hermione Lee now head of Wolfson College Ceadel Martin 1979 The King and Country Debate 1933 Student Politics Pacifism and the Dictators The Historical Journal 22 2 397 422 doi 10 1017 s0018246x00016885 ISSN 0018 246X S2CID 153490642 Edward Heath 1998 The course of my life my autobiography London Hodder amp Stoughton ISBN 978 0340708521 OCLC 40527130 a b Smith Eden Notable Debates at the Oxford Union The Oxford Union Retrieved 6 June 2023 BBC Programme Index genome ch bbc co uk 3 June 1975 Retrieved 18 November 2023 Kevin McCarthy answers questions about the 2020 US Presidential election and saying no to Trump retrieved 4 December 2023 Oxford Union Society Rules Rule 3 Membership of the Society a Life Members i Members of the University and Affiliates 5 Oxford Union Society Rules Rule 3 Membership of the Society a Life Members i Members of the University and Affiliates 6 Oxford Union Society Rules Standing Order F7 Institutions Admitted to the Benefits of Rule 3 c a Course length Membership i Oxford Union Society Rules Standing Order F7 Institutions Admitted to the Benefits of Rule 3 c a Course length Membership ii University Staff Members Oxford Union Society Rules Standing Order F7 Institutions Admitted to the Benefits of Rule 3 c b Termly Membership Oxford Union Society Rules Standing Order F7 Institutions Admitted to the Benefits of Rule 3 c c Permanent Membership Oxford Union Society Rules Standing Order F7 Institutions Admitted to the Benefits of Rule 3 c d Visiting Members Oxford Union Society Rules Rule 3 Membership of the Society b Residential Members Oxford Literary Debating Union Trust Paragraph 3 Charity Details beta charitycommission gov uk Retrieved 14 December 2018 Gould Tom 26 November 2018 Plush to move into Purple Turtle cellar The Oxford Student Retrieved 14 December 2018 Holiday at The Steward s House St Michael s Street Oxford The Landmark Trust www landmarktrust org uk Retrieved 14 December 2018 THE OXFORD LITERARY AND DEBATING UNION CHARITABLE TRUST Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30th June 2017 PDF Charity Commission 5 April 2018 Retrieved 14 December 2018 Sherwood Jennifer Pevsner Nikolaus 1974 Oxfordshire The Buildings of England Harmondsworth Penguin Books p 273 ISBN 978 0 14 071045 8 Walter David 1984 The Oxford Union playground of power London Macdonald ISBN 978 0356095028 OCLC 11311550 Caroline Graham Fiona 2005 Playing at politics an ethnography of the Oxford Union Edinburgh Dunedin Academic Press ISBN 978 1281232168 OCLC 647824828 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Bill Leonard July 2004 The Oxford of Inspector Morse films locations history Dexter Colin Oxford ISBN 978 0954767105 OCLC 55906804 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Oxford IV www oxfordiv com Retrieved 14 December 2018 Oxford Schools oxfordschools Retrieved 14 December 2018 Oxford Union Limited Director s Report and Financial Statements For The Period Ended 30 June 2016 23 March 2017 Retrieved 14 December 2018 The Oxford Union Website The Standing Committee The Oxford Union Site 11 June 2021 Retrieved 11 June 2021 The Standing Committee the Oxford Union www oxford union org Pope Jack Hunter and Felix 21 October 2017 Investigation launched into Union president s alleged rule breach Cherwell Retrieved 14 December 2018 Oxford Union cuts standing committee to five officers Cherwell 11 February 2021 Retrieved 20 February 2021 Roller Matthew 24 November 2017 Public schoolboys dominate Union election Cherwell Lyall Sarah 15 May 1996 O J Simpson at Oxford Some Aye Votes by Students Some Nay The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 14 December 2018 Student fined for OJ tape sale The Independent 30 May 1996 Archived from the original on 24 May 2022 OUSU Council Votes to Oppose Nick Griffin and David Irving Oxford University Student Union 10 November 2007 Archived from the original on 10 November 2007 University faces bigots and martyrs debate row Yorkshire Post Leeds England Encyclopedia com Retrieved 7 June 2023 BBC Media Player Bbc co uk Retrieved on 2013 07 15 Taylor Matthew 27 November 2007 Irving and Griffin spark fury at Oxford Union debate The Guardian London Retrieved 20 May 2010 Unite Against Fascism Student leaders and campaigners condemn Oxford Union s invitation to fascist speakers Archived from the original on 17 June 2008 Editorial 26 October 2007 Editorial Cherwell Retrieved 14 December 2018 Wilson Fiona 26 November 2007 Oxford MP Evan Harris Speaks Out Against No Platform Policy Cherwell Retrieved 14 December 2018 Jon Henley 5 February 2015 Marine Le Pen s Oxford university speech delayed by protesters The Guardian Marine Le Pen protest divides Oxford Cherwell org 6 February 2015 I now hate OUSU Colleges react to Le Pen protesters Cherwell org 13 February 2015 a b Irony Oxford Union Won t Release Video of Whistleblowing Panel The Public 31 May 2018 Baker Oscar 17 June 2018 Union denies censoring whistleblowing panel video Cherwell org Retrieved 27 July 2021 However Union president Gui Cavalcanti told Cherwell We are in no breach of contract nor is it departure from common practice for our events not to be uploaded to our YouTube channel just this academic year we ve had multiple events not uploaded ranging from J J Abrams to Sir Patrick Stewart Blind student violently pulled from Oxford Union BBC News 18 November 2019 Retrieved 19 November 2019 Heslop Lois 19 November 2019 Union President resigns Cherwell Retrieved 19 November 2019 Oxford Union Blind student removed from debate compensated BBC News 2 September 2020 Retrieved 9 February 2021 Kathleen Stock Protests at Oxford Union as talk goes ahead BBC 30 May 2023 Retrieved 7 June 2023 Protester glues themself to the floor of the chamber during Stock s Union address herwell org 30 May 2023 Retrieved 7 June 2023 Hancock Charlie 29 May 2023 Stock should speak at the Union says Rishi Sunak herwell org Retrieved 7 June 2023 Racism debate scrapped after bombings BBC News London 27 April 1999 Retrieved 9 April 2009 Oxford drops Hitler historian debate 9 May 2001 Retrieved 14 December 2018 Taylor Matthew 27 November 2007 Irving and Griffin spark fury at Oxford Union debate London guardian co uk Retrieved 9 April 2009 a b Doctor accuses union of censorship News Virgin Media latestnews virginmedia com Archived from the original on 12 May 2009 Retrieved 20 June 2009 a b c Nitschke snubbed by Oxford debaters smh com au 31 March 2009 Retrieved 9 April 2009 Euthanasia advocate Philip Nitschke snubbed by Oxford Union debaters www news com au 31 March 2009 Retrieved 10 May 2009 Alderson Andrew 9 May 2009 Suicide expert turns on Dr Death Telegraph London telegraph co uk Archived from the original on 13 May 2009 Retrieved 10 May 2009 The Press Association Doctor accuses union of censorship Retrieved 9 April 2009 Dozens attend euthanasia workshop BBC News 5 May 2009 Retrieved 10 May 2009 Smith 1989 p 180 184 Martin Pugh Monckton Walter Turner first Viscount Monckton of Brenchley 1891 1965 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press 2004 online edn Jan 2011 accessed 8 July 2013External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Oxford Union Official website 51 45 11 N 1 15 35 W 51 75306 N 1 25972 W 51 75306 1 25972 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Oxford Union amp oldid 1198968681, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.