Referenda

NUS Referendum

Students have come forward to lead the campaign to disaffiliate from NUS UK and remain affiliated a member of NUS UK. 

They will be out of campus speaking with students from 27th April speaking to students about why the Students’ Union should stay affiliated with NUS UK or disaffiliate from the organisation. 

You can read their full arguments below.

THE CASE TO DISAFFILIATE

We value the role the NUS has played in student advocacy across more than 400 universities and its representation of 7 million students across the UK.  

However, we write to you with deep concern and growing disillusionment at the silence and inaction of the NUS in response to the unfolding atrocities in Gaza. The NUS have failed to adequately confront or even acknowledge what the united nations, the international court of justice, and the 38 nations have recognised as a plausible genocide for nearly 2 years after the 7th of October.  

When the NUS eventually released a statement, it contained diluted language, further undermining confidence in its sincerity. Only after significant backlash did the NUS publish a statement explicitly recognising the genocide. At a recent conference, when asked whether the NUS is an anti-Zionist organisation, the NUS President stated that it is not, prompting a walkout from sabbatical officers. Given that Zionism operates as a racialised political ideology linked to structures of oppression, failing to name it as such contradicts the NUS’s stated commitment to anti racism. 

The NUS has engaged in conduct that appears to undermine and delegitimise the very student officers it claims to represent. When officers, acting in a personal capacity, co-signed a letter with human rights organisations and Jewish kehillah societies expressing concern about NUS’s inaction on the ongoing situation in Gaza and it’s enabling of Islamophobia and anti-Palestinian racism, the NUS responded by calling the letter antisemitic and threatening to exclude officers from its Lead and Change conference. This response reflects a troubling departure from principles of accountability, transparency and good governance.  

Since the 7th of October 2023, the NUS has been adjusting their policies to platform pro-Israeli actors who delegitimise the BDS movement, denied that what’s happening in Gaza is a genocide and apartheid while structurally repressing pro-Palestinian voices through the “tuck inquiry report” and the “historic conduct policy”.  

Their adoption of the IHRA definition of antisemitism, has been widely censured due to its conflation of legitimate criticisms of Israel with antisemitism by journalists like Mehdi Hassan, academics such as Jan Deckers and 60 human and civil rights organisations, yet the NUS continues to weaponize this definition to silence legitimate criticism of Israel and to sanction students, particularly racialised and Muslim students, engaged in human rights advocacy. 

Furthermore, the dismissal of former NUS President Shaima Dallali in 2022 highlights and epitomises the marginalisation of Muslim voices. With the Jewish Voice for Labour condemning the NUS’s actions as “grossly insensitive to the many students, Black, Muslim, Jewish and others, who may not share the UJS’s particular views.” Miss Dallali’s dismissal further contributed to the KCL3 and SOAS2, where sabbatical officers have been suspended for pro-Palestinian activity. Demonstrating the deeply rooted political control the NUS has on its affiliates.  

The NUS further replaced the delegate system with a poorly advertised and ambiguous “liberation collective” which has significantly diminished students’ ability to meaningfully shape NUS priorities. Participation has been limited to a small subset of students who happened to be aware of the process, resulting in structures that lack legitimacy and fail to reflect the needs of the wider student body.  

We cannot allow Keele to remain associated with or financially contribute to an organisation that eschews from speaking out against injustice. We acknowledge the important role the NUS has played and the support they have offered our Student Union. However, we believe our resources could be more effectively invested directly into our campus and student body rather than being channelled to the NUS.  We currently have accessibility issues on campus, underfunded support services and a projected £5 million financial deficit for the 2025/26 academic year. Severe cuts are also being made to humanities and social science courses, as was evidently witnessed during the on-campus strikes last year. 

As much as we value or democratic principles, we also value the well- being and future of our university first and foremost. Our SU currently pays more than twenty thousand pounds annually to NUS UK despite most of the financial benefits coming from NUS charity. Therefore, given the NUS’s declining relevance, limited sector impact and lack of meaningful representation for students, continued financial investment in NUS UK appears increasingly difficult to justify.  

THE CASE TO REMAIN AFFILIATED

 

Stronger together. More powerful as a movement. Vote to remain affiliated to NUS UK.

As one of the world’s largest student movements, NUS UK is the bridge between Keele students and national policy change. We focus on high-impact, priority campaigns that fight for the future of education.

Your contribution ensures that the unique voices of Keele students are amplified where decisions are made – from Westminster to Europe.
 

Why does NUS matter for Keele students?

Defending the graduate route
We successfully saved the Graduate Route Visa, protecting the future of 1000+ international students at Keele who rely on it to start their careers.

Leading the fight on student loans
On April 7th, the Universities’ Minister announced that we had won one of our key asks on Plan 2 student loans, and that the interest rate will now be capped. We have drawn over £4M of positive media coverage onto the plight of Plan 2 borrowers, dominated the headlines and mobilised over 2000 people to write to their MPs, and 50 SUs to join us at our lobby day.

We are the loud national voice achieving wins such as a 3.1% maintenance loan increase, totalling at least an extra £131M in students’ pockets, and £745k uplift in student support for Keele students in 2025. In 2026, we will win again thanks to collective action.

Protecting students’ rights
We have shaped the Renters’ Rights Bill to limit rent up front and early sign on, directly lowering the financial barriers for Keele students in the private rental market.

Direct access to power
We provide the secretariat for the APPG on Students. This allowed sabbatical officers from across the UK to step into Parliament and speak directly to MPs about the student loan crisis; an opportunity unique to NUS UK members.

Why your contribution matters

When we lobby on issues like Plan 2 loans, or the Renters’ Rights Bill, our power comes from representing a united front of millions. Every union that steps away not only reduces the budget; it also thins the mandate we have to hold the government to account.

While national policy shifts benefit everyone, membership provides Keele sabbatical officers and their NUS reps with direct, exclusive access to power. This includes attending National Lobby Days, meeting local MPs in Westminster, and participating in the APPG for Students to voice Keele-specific concerns to national decision makers.

Your investment powers specialised research and legal analysis required to secure wins like the £131M uplift in student support that has led to £745k directly into Keele students’ pockets, and the protection of the Graduate Route Visa.

In short: we can only win at the volume Keele students deserve if we have the collective weight of an entire movement behind us. The stronger we are, the more we win.

Disclaimer: The views and claims expressed in the 'case for' statements are solely those of the official campaign teams and do not represent the views, policies, or official stance of Keele University Students' Union.


What is the NUS UK? 

The NUS UK represents university and college students across the United Kingdom and has been doing so since 1922. Currently, there are around 600 Students’ Unions across the UK, and Keele University Students’ Union is one of these members. The NUS UK also has devolved sub-institutions in Scotland, Wales, England, and Northern Ireland. 

Being a member of the NUS UK entitles the Students’ Union to: 

  • Input into the direction of the NUS UK, influencing national policy and campaigns 
  • Send reps to the NUS conference 
  • Vote in the NUS Executive Officer elections 

The Cost  

The current affiliation fee for Keele SU to be a member of NUS UK is £25,041.04. In addition, the Students’ Union pays £6,260.26 + VAT to be a member of NUS Charity. Our membership to NUS Charity is not part of the referendum.

Why are we having a referendum?  

At our Annual General Meeting on 2nd December 2025, Keele Students triggered a referendum on our affiliation with the National Union of Students (NUS) UK. A motion was also submitted to Union Assembly, Delegates were informed of the submission but ultimately referred it to Annual General Meeting where all Keele SU's external affiliations are voted on.

You can read the submission in the "Case to Disaffiliate"

What does the NUS UK do and how does it work?  

The National Union of Students is governed by its Articles of Association. Priorities from member Union's and polling platform What Students Think help to shape the direction of the NUS UK across 4 National Conferences (NUS England, NUS Scotland, NUS Cymru & NUS USI) and the Liberation Collective.  

The NUS also has full-time officers with various remits and they are responsible for taking priorities passed at conference forward. Elections for these roles take place every two years.  

The Students' Union sends NUS Reps to NUS England and the Liberation Collective, where Reps represent the Students' Union and the views of our members. The Reps have full voting rights and will be making a decision on who gets elected to as NUS England President, NUS Vice President Higher Education (England) and NUS Vice President Liberation and Equality (UK).  

The difference between NUS UK and NUS Charity  

The UK’s National Union of Students is comprised of two shoulder-to-shoulder organisations: 

  • NUS UK is the political and campaigning union, which conducts the conferences, develops policies, and sets the campaigning priorities. 
  • NUS Charity provides general support and advice for Students’ Unions around the country, providing core training, networking opportunities, and crisis support. 

This referendum is only in relation to Manchester Students’ Union’s membership to NUS UK, not NUS Charity. 

The Vote 

Voting in the NUS UK Referendum will be taking place from 9am on Monday 27th April - 5pm on Wednesday 29th April 2026. 

The referendum question will be: Should Keele Students’ Union reman affiliated to the National Union of Students UK (NUS UK) or disaffiliate from NUS UK?

- Remain Affiliated with NUS UK

- Disaffiliate from NUS UK

- Abstain

Byelaws/Constitution states a 15% student turnout is required for the vote to be valid.

Voting takes place through a first-past-the-post system. Once voting closes, the results are calculated by the Deputy Returning Officer and formally approved by the Returning Officer. Voting in this referendum will take place across 3 days. 

What if Students Choose to Disaffiliate/remain affiliated?

If students vote to leave: Keele SU will end our NUS UK membership on 31st December 2026. 

If students vote to stay: Keele SU will remain a member of NUS UK and a referendum cannot be triggered until the next Annual General Meeting.

 

Rules & Complaints

Throughout the NUS UK Referendum, campaign teams have to abide by our Guidance & Rules to ensure the referendum is fun, free, fair and transparent. The rules will be circulated to both campaign teams. Any complaints regarding conduct in the referendum can be raised by any student through the complaints form up until 5pm on Wednesday 29th April. 

Any questions or issues? Email su.voice@keele.ac.uk

NUS UK Referendum 2026

Should Keele Students’ Union reman affiliated to the National Union of Students UK (NUS UK) or disaffiliate from NUS UK?