Notes
A November 2016 Populus opinion poll commissioned by
Accord
found that state
funded schools selecting pupils by faith was opposed by people in
Britain by a ratio of almost five to one. A large majority of
adherents of all major world faiths plus each of England and
Wales’ largest Christian denominations were similarly all found
to oppose this faith discrimination.
Accord has set out some of the wealth of research highlighting
the positive impact from religious mixing in
schools
here.
In 2010 the Coalition Government implemented a 50% religious
discrimination in admissions cap for new free schools (free
schools are a type of academy school). It is still possible for
other types of school to open in England, and the Government is
currently
trying to have
opened a fully selective voluntary aided faith school in
Peterborough. However, the launch of the free schools programme
was followed in 2011 by the introduction of a
legal
presumption that almost all new state funded schools
should be free schools, meaning almost all new faith schools that
have opened since then in England have been free schools subject
to the cap.
In 2015 the Conservative Government
told Accord it
would be continuing with the faith free school discrimination cap
‘… as an important way of supporting these schools to be
inclusive and to meet the needs of a broad mix of families.’ In
May 2017 the Conservative Party
manifesto committed a
Conservative Government to scrapping the 50% policy and was
justified on the
spurious
grounds that the cap prevented any Catholic school from
being opened.