Toby Young: Petition to oust controversial columnist as universities regulator reaches 200,000 signatures
Change.org appeal for Free Schools advocate's removal from board of Office for Students gathers pace as ex-Labour MP victimised in lewd tweets brands appointment 'beyond belief'
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Your support makes all the difference.A petition calling for Toby Young to be sacked from the universities regulator has gathered more than 200,000 signatures.
The Change.org petition passed the milestone as a former Labour MP who was the subject of one of his controversial tweets joined calls for him to be removed.
Pamela Nash said it was “beyond belief” that Mr Young had been appointed to the board of the Office for Students (OfS) and urged the Government to sack him “immediately”.
Mr Young has faced growing calls to resign over his record of Twitter postings - including multiple references to women's breasts.
The petition, which says Mr Young is “entirely unqualified” for the watchdog role, has twice the number required for a cause to be raised in the House of Commons when organised through Parliament's system.
Theresa May was forced to address criticism over his appointment on Sunday and said she had been unaware of Mr Young's history of crude and sexist comments.
The Prime Minister warned him that he will be removed if he makes any more offensive Twitter postings.
However, Ms Nash said his unsuitability for the role went beyond “the odd tweet or stray comment”.
She told The Guardian: “It is beyond belief that he has been appointed to the board of the Office of Students when he thinks so little of the majority of those who seek a university education.”
Appearing on BBC One's The Andrew Marr Show, Mrs May said she was “not impressed” by the comments and that any repeat would not be tolerated.
“Toby Young has done exceedingly good work in relation to free schools and that's what has led to him being appointed to the Office for Students,” she said.
“When he was appointed I was not aware of these comments that he had made. Frankly I'm not at all impressed by those comments.
“He's now in public office and as far as I'm concerned if he was to continue to use that sort of language and talk in that sort of way he would no longer be in public office.”
Ms Nash was Labour MP for Airdrie and Shotts between 2010 and 2015, when she was the youngest member of the House of Commons.
Mr Young is accused of making lewd remarks on Twitter about Ms Nash during a session of Prime Minister's Questions in 2012.
Labour has stepped up calls for him to be dismissed, although Mr Young also received high-profile backing.
Shadow Health Secretary Jon Ashworth said that she should sack him immediately.
“These tweets from Toby Young are disgusting, offensive, sexist. She should show some leadership and she should get rid of him,” he told The Andrew Marr Show.
Meanwhile, Labour MP Layla Moran told BBC Radio 4's Westminster Hour: “I think he needs to be moved on as quickly as possible, I think he needs to resign if hasn't - or un-appointed, however the process would work - he's not fit for purpose for this job.”
Fraser Nelson, editor of The Spectator magazine, for whom Young writes a regular column, said that his record as a pioneer of free schools showed that he was the right person to take on vested interests in the higher education system.
Mr Nelson said that Mr Young deserved to be judged by his efforts in more recent years to help others, setting up new schools for disadvantaged children.
While he acknowledged that some of the tweets were “pretty awful”, he said that Mr Young had been the subject of “quite remarkable” efforts to blacken his name since his appointment was announced last week.
“People should be judged by what they do with their lives, not by the worst of their bad jokes,” Mr Nelson wrote in a blog posting.
“And it might drive Toby's critics mad, but he has done more for others in the last few years than most (of) his critics will do in a lifetime.”
PA
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