As I recall, what it said was that Boris Johnson, Gove, Rees-Mogg and other prominent Tories were at Oxford at the same time in the late 80's. At the time, apparently, you could get by at Oxford with no work whatsoever, the whole point was to be president of a student union, or a debating society, in the like. And in the wake of Thatcher's trouble with EU, something much like Brexit was being discussed in Tory students' associations.
The article does mention that all of this was true in the 80s and that Oxford is a lot more meritocratic now than it was back then; and they expect hard work from their students now.
Absolutely. Looking at our presidents: Macron was at Sciences Po, later ENA; his parents are neurosurgeons. Hollande: Sciences Po / ENA. His father was a surgeon. Chirac: Sciences Po/ENA, his father was a bank manager. Mitterrand: law studies and Sciences Po. He didn't study at the ENA, but that's just because the ENA didn't exist back then. His father was an engineer.Salmoneus wrote: ↑Tue Jun 25, 2019 2:19 pm The French system, according to my tutors at Oxford, was traditionally much more dominated by enarques than the UK system was by Oxbridge. Particularly on the elected side - we've always had a lot of highly-educated civil servants, but less so our politicians. And we've always had more diversity in terms of the number of educational establishments that counted as being adequately educated (even in ancient days, there were Trinity and the scottish universities).
We have the same problem with Sciences Po/ENA (the usual pathway into politics). In some ways, it's probably a bit worse. As I see it, Britain is acutely aware of its class divides; in France we tend to pretend there is no such thing.But the big issue is simply applications. Whether a child applies to Oxbridge is heavily influenced by their parents and by their schools, and children are often inculcated with a self-fulfilling prophecy of resentment and reverse-snobbery - "you can't go there, it's not for people like us". Private schools, on the other hand, push the option, even make it seem natural.