Ed Miliband Parks Tank On Nick Clegg's Sheffield Lawn

Ed Miliband Parks Tank On Nick Clegg's Lawn
Britain's deputy prime minister, Nick Clegg (R), and leader of the opposition Labour party, Ed Miliband, leave after attending the funeral service of former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher at St Paul's Cathedral, in London April 17, 2013. Thatcher, who was Conservative prime minister between 1979 and 1990, died on April 8 at the age of 87. REUTERS/Olivia Harris (BRITAIN - Tags: POLITICS RELIGION OBITUARY SOCIETY)
Britain's deputy prime minister, Nick Clegg (R), and leader of the opposition Labour party, Ed Miliband, leave after attending the funeral service of former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher at St Paul's Cathedral, in London April 17, 2013. Thatcher, who was Conservative prime minister between 1979 and 1990, died on April 8 at the age of 87. REUTERS/Olivia Harris (BRITAIN - Tags: POLITICS RELIGION OBITUARY SOCIETY)
OLIVIA HARRIS/WPA Rota

Ed Miliband will accuse Nick Clegg of a fresh "betrayal" of students today after the Liberal Democrat leader's broken pledge at the last general election to oppose any increase in tuition fees.

In a calculated incursion onto Mr Clegg's political home turf in Sheffield, the Labour leader will denounce the coalition for allowing hundreds of thousands of young people to "fall off" the electoral register in the run-up to this year's election.

In a speech to students at Sheffield Hallam University- in the next door constituency to the Deputy Prime Minister's - Mr Miliband will describe the loss of voting rights as a democratic "scandal" and call on ministers to ensure young people are not denied a voice on polling day in May.

The allegations drew an angry response from the Lib Dems who accused Labour of "scaremongering", pointing out that Mr Clegg had secured extra funding to boost registration rates among students and other under-represented groups.

Labour has calculated that almost one million people have dropped off the register in the last year as a result of what the party says was the "hasty" way the Government introduced individual voter registration - intended to reduce electoral fraud - without proper safeguards.

It says that many of the missing voters are young people - in part due to the decision to end the block registration by universities and colleges of students living in halls of residence.

University cities and towns such as Cardiff, Liverpool, Newcastle, Southampton, Leicester, Nottingham, Brighton and Hull have all seen five-figure falls in the numbers of registered voters, according to Labour, while in London the numbers are down by almost 100,000.

In his speech, Mr Miliband will promise to lead a "national mission" to ensure young voters were able to hold the coalition leaders to account on May 7.

"This government has betrayed young people," he will say. "Having broken their promises on tuition fees to young people, having failed to build the economy that will work for them, having short-changed their future, this is David Cameron and Nick Clegg's final insult to young people.

"They are sitting by and watching hundreds of thousands of young people in our country lose their sacred democratic rights. We will not allow this scandal to happen and no right-thinking person should either."

He will call on the Government, the Electoral Commission, universities and local authorities to take urgent action by the end of the month to ensure that people can get back on the register before the deadline of April 20.

His claims were dismissed by Lib Dem MP Tom Brake who said that Mr Clegg had been responsible for securing £10 million of extra funding to support registration by students and other under-represented groups.

He said that many of the "missing" student voters would still be on the electoral roll but would have previously been registered twice.

"Labour must have forgotten they began the policy of individual electoral registration while they were in government and still support it in principle," he said.

"Instead of scaremongering, Labour should be working with their own local authorities to ensure that the large amount of money available is spent helping people, particularly students, register to vote."

An Electoral Commission spokesman said: "It has always been known that some areas with large student populations would initially see a fall in the number of students on their register and that extra effort would be needed to ensure as many as possible are on the register before the April 20 deadline.

"Electoral registration officers all have detailed plans in place to target areas with high student populations. This work will continue right up until the registration deadline."

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