Oxford University Labour Club (OULC) is a student club at the University of Oxford founded in 1919 to promote democratic socialism at Oxford University. The club is affiliated to the Labour Party and claims to be the oldest student Labour Club.
The club caters for any students who are interested in the ideals of the labour movement whether members of the Labour Party or entirely new to politics. Stewart Wood, special adviser to consecutive Labour Party leaders Gordon Brown and Ed Miliband, said that 'OULC is held up as an exemplar of what needs to be done.' During his visit to Oxford in July 2009 the Prime Minister Gordon Brown was reported as having praised OULC's 'brilliant contribution to progressive politics in the University, the city and the country.' The club was instrumental in returning Andrew Smith to Parliament for Oxford East at the 2010 General Election with a 4.1% swing to Labour, the largest in England outside London.
Throughout the year it hosts a range of speaker, social, discussion, and campaigning events, as well as producing a termly magazine called Look Left. Signature events include the annual Barbara Castle Memorial Lecture and John Smith Memorial Dinner.
In 2016, some officers of the Oxford University Labour Club resigned citing allegations of antisemitism in the club. This resulted in the national Labour Party officially investigating the club for antisemitism, resulting in a report concluding that the true extent of the problem was hard to verify.
History
David Lewis and the early 1930s
When David Lewis came to Oxford, the Labour Club was a tame organisation adhering to Christian activism and the theories of people such as R. H. Tawney and his book The Acquisitive Society. David's modified Jewish Labour Bundist interpretation of Marxism, that Cameron Smith labels "Parliamentary Marxism," ignited the renewed interest in the club after the disappointment with Ramsay MacDonald's second Labour government. In 1932 the Labour Club and the October Club (Oxford University's communist society) jointly organised a reception for a contingent of hunger marchers passing through Oxford.
The Oxford newspaper The Isis noted Lewis' leadership ability at this early stage in his career in their 7 February 1934 issue: "The energy of these University Socialists is almost unbelievable. If the Socialist movement as a whole is anything like as active as they are, then a socialist victory at the next election is inevitable."
In February 1934, British fascist William Joyce, (Lord Haw Haw), visited Oxford. Lewis and future Ontario Co-operative Commonwealth Federation leader Ted Jolliffe, organised a noisy protest against the fascist, by simply planting Labour Club members in the dance hall that Joyce was speaking in, and causing a commotion, as groups of two and three left making much noise on the creaking wooden floors. The speech was foiled. Afterwards, the Blackshirts contingent had a street battle in Oxford with members of the Labour Club and the townsfolk.
Lewis prevented the communists from really making inroads at Oxford during his time there. He increased the Labour Club's membership by three-quarters, from 484 members in December 1932 to over 850 members by the time he left, while the October Club never rose above 300 members. Ted Jolliffe stated "there was a difference between his speeches at the [[Oxford Union|[Oxford] Union]] and his speeches at the Labour Club. His speeches at the Union had more humour in them; the atmosphere was entirely different. But his speeches at the Labour Club were deadly serious.... His influence at the Labour Club, more than anyone else's, I think, explains the failure of the Communists to make headway there." In 1935, the Soviet controlled Comintern's Seventh Congress, called for a united left response to fascism, called the popular front. The communist October Club used this call, for a popular front, as a pretext to have a union between themselves and the Labour Club. Under Lewis' leadership, the club was able to easily defeat a motion by the October Club, as only 20 OULC members voted for the union.
When Lewis returned to Canada in the summer of 1935, there really wasn't anyone to replace him, to keep the communists at bay as The Isis noted: "The Labour may have rejected fusion [with the October Club] but the matter is not yet settled. An interesting thing is the dearth of what are technically known as 'promising people' in the ranks of the Labour Club. For years the Labour Club has been turning out a Geoffrey Wilson, a Frank Hardie, a John Cripps, a David Lewis, each year: but this [coming] year there seems to be no figures as outstanding as these."
Communist merger
Since there was not a strong Labour leader to take over from Lewis after he graduated and left in the summer of 1935, the Labour Club amended its constitution to remove impediments to fusion with the communist October Club in December 1935. Shortly thereafter the two clubs joined together forming a "popular front". The club's membership peaked before the war at between 1000 and 1200 members depending on whose numbers were used, which was approximately a fifth of all of Oxford's 5023 students. Of the club's total membership, the Communists made up approximately less than 200 members.
Antisemitism inquiry
The national Labour Party appointed Janet Royall, to head an inquiry into allegations of antisemitism within the Club made in February 2016. The then-current Co-Chair and another officer resigned from the Club, alleging they were disturbed by the discrimination and antisemitism they alleged was inherent in the Club. The report – which was not published in full but was leaked to the media in August 2016 – concluded that antisemitic incidents had occurred and some Jewish members felt uncomfortable attending the Club, but that the extent of the problem was hard to verify.
Constitution and organisation
OULC is run by an elected Executive Committee, as established under the OULC Constitution. The Constitution can be changed by a two-thirds majority at any OULC General Meeting, Termly General Meeting (TGM), or Extraordinary General Meeting; at which its members can also pass policy in the form of motions (such as submissions to the Labour Party's Policy Review), hear reports from the executive and elect (at the TGM) the new Executive.
Under the most recent version of the OULC Constitution (as of Trinity Term 2022), the head of the Executive is the two Co-Chairs. One Co-Chair position must at all times be held by someone who "self-identifies partly or wholly as a woman or transfeminine", and three other positions on the Executive at every TGM, must be reserved for those who self-identify as belonging to a marginalised gender.
OULC also runs campaigns. The club plays a role in the efforts to keep Oxford East Labour and contributed significantly to the election effort in July 2009 where Labour gained four seats on the county council, the most successful Labour result in the county. In its report on the election victory, the Cherwell cited the club's then co-chair, Jacob Turner, as saying that he felt the result was a consequence of "a very great effort from the local party including Labour Club members. We've been going out, meeting people, and asking them not to vote for us, but just how our councillors can help them. We've built up a relationship with residents which is ultimately expressed in voting."
In the run up to the 2010 General Election the club regularly turned out 20 campaigners every Sunday. This made a huge contribution to Oxford East's position of having the highest voter contact rate of anywhere in the country (more than Wales, Scotland and the North-East put together). In 2012, the club was instrumental in Labour winning its first Student Ward in the city in over two decades. When possible the club sends members to other towns to campaign, including Reading, Slough, Southampton and even Edinburgh. In 2022, OULC travelled to Birmingham to campaign in the successful defence of Birmingham Erdington.
OULC holds a number of social events including a fresher's dinner in Michaelmas Term and a barbecue or picnic in Trinity term. OULC also hosts an annual dinner, the John Smith Memorial Dinner, in the fifth week of Hilary term. The dinner commemorates the contribution and life of John Smith, the former Labour party leader, who died suddenly in 1994. Recent speakers at this event have included Neil Kinnock, Andrew Adonis and Margaret Beckett.
The most prominent and regular social event at the society is called 'Beer and Bickering'. This is a weekly debating society whereby three or four motions, or points of discussion, are debated, where students take it in turns to make speeches either for or against the motion. The title of every motion always begins with the phrase 'this house believes', and there is usually a mixture of serious and joke motions. The event usually takes place at a college common room and lasts two or three hours.
Involvement in Labour politics
Labour Students
OULC is affiliated with Labour Students and the national Labour Party, and former OULC members have held a number of positions there.
In February 2011, OULC disaffiliated from Labour Students for a one-year period as a protest over the way the organisation was run. In February 2012, OULC voted by 20 to 4 to rejoin Labour Students citing the progress made by the leadership of the organisation in improving accountability and democracy. However, in 2019, the club voted unanimously to disaffiliate with the co-chairs Owen Winter and Rosie Sourbut citing incompetence by Labour Students' national committee and the expulsion of all but one Northern Labour Club. Shortly afterwards Labour's National Executive Committee voted to disaffiliate Labour Students altogether.
Following the recreation of Labour Students in 2022, OULC narrowly voted to support a motion in favour of engaging in their upcoming internal elections by endorsing candidates. Two members of OULC stood for the 2022 Labour Students executive, including one candidate for chair.
Other
OULC also has links with other socialist organisations, trade unions, and Labour Party groups, including the Oxford District, Reading and Slough Labour Parties.
Broader political involvement
Oxford University Student Union
Since the establishment of the Oxford University Student Union (OUSU) in the early 1970s, OULC has maintained a presence. There have been many Labour presidents, starting with John Grogan in the early 1980s, and OULC candidates have in recent years been successful in the 1999 (Anneliese Dodds), 2000 (Kirsty McNeill), 2004 (Emma Norris), 2005 (Alan Strickland) and 2006 (Martin McCluskey) elections. Whilst the Club no longer runs official candidates, OUSU's executive committee and delegate body has also had a Labour presence. In 2019, former co-chair Anisha Faruk was elected president of Oxford SU, and her fellow co-chair Ray Williams was elected VP for Access and Academic Affairs.
National Union of Students
Stephen Twigg was National President of the National Union of Students and an OULC member in the early 1990s.
Local government
Six current or former members of OULC currently sit on Oxford City Council, and one is a County Councillor in Oxfordshire. As of the 2016 Oxford City Council Elections, Dan Iley-Wiliamson, OULC Membership and Alumni Officer at the time, was elected as a councillor for the Holywell ward, serving most city centre University colleges. In 2021, Michael O'Connor, a graduate student and OULC member, was elected County Councillor for Holywell Ward.
A number of former OULC co-chairs stood for council seats in 2022, including David Parton and Eleanor Ormsby, both for Westminster City Council.
Parliament
At the 2005 General Election, five recent former OULC members stood for election as Labour candidates. In the 2019 election, Rosie Sourbut, who had been the co-chair earlier that year, ran as the Labour candidate in Oxford West and Abingdon.
In parliament former OULC members currently include Angela and Maria Eagle, Ed Miliband, Rachel Reeves, Ellie Reeves, Anneliese Dodds, Bridget Phillipson, Keir Mather, and Alistair Strathern. While no longer in parliament, John Grogan, David Miliband and Ed Balls were OULC members at Oxford (Balls was also a member of the Oxford University Conservative Association) and before Britain left the European Union, OULC alumni Richard Corbett and Mary Honeyball were both members of the European Parliament.
Former members of the executive committee
<gallery widths="120" heights="140" caption="Notable former members of the executive committee" class="center">
File:Mme Barbara Castle, Ministre britannique du développement outre-mer.jpg|Barbara Castle (St Hugh's College), former Minister
File:David Miliband 2.jpg|David Miliband (Corpus Christi College), former Foreign Secretary
File:Official portrait of Rt Hon Edward Miliband MP crop 2.jpg|Ed Miliband (Corpus Christi College), former leader of the Labour Party
File:Official portrait of Bridget Phillipson MP crop 2.jpg|Bridget Phillipson (Hertford College), Secretary of State for Education and Minister for Women and Equalities
</gallery>
List of previous co-chairs
Key
1950–1960
{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
!Year
!Michaelmas
!Hilary
!Trinity
|-
| align="center" |1950–51
| align="center" | 12px Shirley Catlin
| align="center" |
| align="center" | 12px M W Smart
|-
| align="center" |1951–52
| align="center" | 12px H Near
| align="center" |
| align="center" | 12px Oleg Kerensky
|-
| align="center" |1952–53
| align="center" | 12px M H Jones
| align="center" |
| align="center" |
|-
| align="center" |1953–54
| align="center" |
| align="center" | 12px H Middleton
| align="center" | 12px Jeremy Isaacs
|-
| align="center" |1954–55
| align="center" | 12px Anthony Howard
| align="center" | 12px Ruth Finnegan
| align="center" |
|-
| align="center" |1955–56
| align="center" |
| align="center" |
| align="center" |
|-
| align="center" |1956–57
| align="center" |
| align="center" |
| align="center" |
|-
| align="center" |1957–58
| align="center" |
| align="center" | John Horsfield
| align="center" |
|-
| align="center" |1958–59
| align="center" |
| align="center" | 12px Dennis Potter
| align="center" |
|-
| align="center" |1959–60
| align="center" |
| align="center" |
| align="center" |
|-
|}
1990–2000
{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
!Year
!Michaelmas
!Hilary
!Trinity
|- <!--
| align="center" |1990–91
| align="center" |
| align="center" |
| align="center" |
|-
| align="center" |1991–92
| align="center" |
| align="center" |
| align="center" |
|-
| align="center" |1992–93
| align="center" |
| align="center" |
| align="center" |
|-
| align="center" |1993–94
| align="center" |
| align="center" |
| align="center" |
|-
| align="center" |1994–95
| align="center" |
| align="center" |
| align="center" |
|-
| align="center" |1995–96
| align="center" |
| align="center" |
| align="center" |
|- -->
| align="center" |1996–97
| align="center" |
| align="center" |
| align="center" | 12px Jessica Spearman
|-
| align="center" |1997–98
| align="center" | 12px Sarah Atkinson
| align="center" |
| align="center" |
|-
| align="center" |1998–99
| align="center" | 12px Andrew Chidgey
| align="center" |
| align="center" |
|-
| align="center" |1999–00
| align="center" |12px Andrew Small
| align="center" | 12px Joel Brookfield
| align="center" | 12px John Craig
|-
|}
2000–2010
{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
!Year
!Michaelmas
!Hilary
!Trinity
|-
| align="center" |2000–01
| align="center" | 12px Anneliese Dodds <br/> 12px Daniel Paskins
| align="center" | 12px Ellie Reeves
| align="center" | Ben Harris <br/> Kat Overton
|-
| align="center" |2001–02
| align="center" | 12px Karim Palant
| align="center" | 12px Julian Hudson <br/> 12px Sophia Woodley
| align="center" | 12px Mark Goodsell <br/> 12px Andrew Thomas
|-
| align="center" |2002–03
| align="center" | 12px Nicky Ellis <br/> 12px Peter Morton
| align="center" | 12px Oliver Kempton <br/> 12px Heather Pipe
| align="center" | 12px James Cloyne
|-
| align="center" |2003–04
| align="center" | 12px Rebecca Wilkinson
| align="center" | 12px Greg Hilditch <br/> 12px Bridget Phillipson
| align="center" | Tim Flatman <br/> Joe Taylor
|-
| align="center" |2004–05
| align="center" | Max Schmid <br/> Dan Simpson
| align="center" |12px Stephen Longden
| align="center" |12px Alex Brodkin
|-
| align="center" |2005–06
| align="center" | 12px Jack Graves <br/> 12px Martin McCluskey
| align="center" | 12px Niklas Albin Svensson
| align="center" | 12px Nicky Blair <br/> 12px Phil Patterson
|-
| align="center" |2006–07
| align="center" | 12px Simon Latham <br/> 12px Emily Richards
| align="center" | 12px Georgia Gould <br/> Thom Greenwood
| align="center" | Mark Baker <br/> Luke Sherlock
|-
| align="center" |2007–08
| align="center" | Kieran Hutchinson <br/> Harriet Myles
| align="center" | Alice Taylor <br/> Stuart Tooley
| align="center" |12px David Green <br/> Sarah Hutchinson
|-
| align="center" |2008–09
| align="center" | Vincent Romanelli <br/> Daniel Wilson
| align="center" | 12px Scott Seamons
| align="center" | 12px Jamie Susskind <br/>12px Jacob Turner
|-
| align="center" |2009–10
| align="center" | 12px Ayo Ajanaku <br/> 12px Ben Lyons
| align="center" | 12px Charlotte Carnegie <br/> Hannah Cusworth
| align="center" | Sam Burt <br/> 12px Alistair Strathern
|-
|}
2010–2020
{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
!Year
!Michaelmas
!Hilary
!Trinity
|-
| align="center" |2010–11
| align="center" | 12px Stephen Bush <br/> 12px Kieran Cunnigham
| align="center" |
12px Jack Evans <br/>
12px Kat Shields
| align="center" | 12px Lincoln Hill <br/>
|-
| align="center" |2011–12
| align="center" |12px Colin S. Jackson <br/>12px Nicola Sugden
| align="center" |12px Thomas Adams <br/>12px David Butler
| align="center" | 12px Anthony Breach <br/> 12px Kevin Feeney
|-
| align="center" |2012–13
| align="center" | 12px Grace Pollard <br/> 12px Claire Smith
| align="center" | 12px Joe Collin <br /> 12px Adam Whiley
| align="center" | 12px Alex Graham <br/> 12px Jonathan Metzer
|-
| align="center" |2013–14
| align="center" |12px Helena Dollimore <br/>12px Aled Jones
| align="center" |12px Daniel Turner <br/>12px Henry Zeffman
| align="center" |12px Felix Light <br/>12px Orla Oakey
|-
| align="center" |2014–15
| align="center" |12px Charlie Atkins <br/>12px Nikhil Venkatesh
| align="center" |12px David Cesar-Heymann <br/>12px Hannah Lovell
| align="center" |12px Madalena Leao <br/>12px Loughlan O'Doherty
|-
| align="center" |2015–16
| align="center" | 12px David Klemperer <br/>12px Kate Welsh
| align="center" | 12px Alex Chalmers <br/>12px Noni Csogor
| align="center" |12px Eleanor Ormsby <br/>12px David Parton
|-
| align="center" |2016–17
| align="center" |12px Tom Turner <br/>12px Tom Wadsworth
| align="center" |12px Lucas Bertholdi-Saad <br/>12px Katie Oldham
| align="center" |12px Hannah Taylor <br/>12px Tom Zagoria
|-
| align="center" |2017–18
| align="center" |12px Zoe Hodge <br/>12px Iris Kaye-Smith
| align="center" |12px Lizzy Diggins <br/>12px Keir Mather
| align="center" |12px Anisha Faruk <br/>12px Ray Williams
|-
| align="center" |2018–19
| align="center" |12px Charlotte Austin <br/>12px Francesca Best
| align="center" |12px Rosie Sourbut <br/>12px Owen Winter
| align="center" |12px Grace Davies <br/>12px Arya Tandon
|-
| align="center" |2019–20
| align="center" |12px Megan Howells <br/>12px Jay Staker
| align="center" |12px Euan Huey <br/>12px Lottie Sellers
| align="center" |12px Ali Al-Zubaidi <br/>12px Connie Bostock
|-
|}
2020–present
{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
!Year
!Michaelmas
!Hilary
!Trinity
|-
| align="center" |2020–21
| align="center" |12px Sophie Heath <br/> 12px Matthew Kayanja
| align="center" |12px Sofia Cotterill <br/> 12px Zed Nott
| align="center" |12px Laura Ennis <br/> 12px Danial Hussain
|-
| align="center" |2021–22
| align="center" |12px Olly Boyland <br/> 12px Anjali Kawa
| align="center" |12px Amy Field <br/> 12px Danny Leach
| align="center" |12px Hari Bravery <br/> 12px Maia Hamilton
|-
| align="center"|2022–23
| align="center"|12px Madelaine Cooke <br/> 12px Isabella Simpson
| align="center"|12px Ella Staddon
| align="center"|12px Ali Khosravi <br/> 12px Nidhi Madhani
|-
| align="center"|2023–24
| align="center"|12px Thripty Dutt <br/> 12px James Melia
| align="center"|12px Rose Harris <br/> 12px Aaron McIntyre
| align="center"|12px Elinor Clare <br/> 12px Jack Hurrell
|-
| align="center"|2024–25
| align="center"|12px Niamh Balroop <br/> 12px Thomas Taborn
| align="center"|12px Akshita Anand <br/> 12px Joseph Thomas
| align="center"|12px Mhairi Beken <br/> 12px Hattie Simpson
|-
| align="center"|2025-26
| align="center"| 12px Jack Leader <br/> 12px Willow Parker
| align="center" | 12px Freya Cushman <br/> 12px Harry Aldridge
| align="center" | 12px Melodi Doğru <br/> 12px Seth Olner
|-
| align="center" |2026-27
| align="center" | 12px Tom Haydon<br/> 12px Catherine Harrison
| align="center" |
| align="center" |
|}
See also
- Cambridge University Labour Club
- Oxford University Liberal Democrats
- Oxford University Conservative Association
- The October Club
- Oxford Union
