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Starmer is accused of ‘fudging the very fact’ in ‘claiming he attended state faculty’ by former pupil

Sir Keir Starmer has been accused of ‘fudging the facts’ about attending a state school, the founder of a social mobility charity has claimed.

Sutton Trust founder Sir Peter Lampl, who went to Reigate Grammar – the same school as the Prime Minister – made the claim as he attacked the Government’s plans to charge VAT on private school fees.

The school was funded by the local council when the Prime Minister joined, but became a private school two years into his time there.

Sir Keir received a bursary from the council to continue his studies until sixth form, as did other pupils who began attending the school before it was converted.

Sir Peter was an adviser to the Blair government on education and until last year was chairman of the Sutton Trust, a charity which aims to improve social mobility.

Writing for the Telegraph newspaper, he said: ‘I don’t pretend the school we went to was a state school, Starmer does. But he is fudging the facts.

‘I am helping young people to benefit from an education that made all the difference to me, Starmer is destroying the opportunities to have the same chances he had.’

Sir Peter also claimed the ‘regressive’ decision to charge the tax on school fees would deprive children of extra-curricular activities and amounted to ‘vandalising’ the private sector.

Sir Keir Starmer has been accused of 'fudging the facts' about attending a state school, the founder of a social mobility charity has claimed

Sir Keir Starmer has been accused of ‘fudging the facts’ about attending a state school, the founder of a social mobility charity has claimed

Sutton Trust founder Sir Peter Lampl, who went to Reigate Grammar - the same school as the Prime Minister - made the claim as he attacked the Government's plans to charge VAT on private school fees

Sutton Trust founder Sir Peter Lampl, who went to Reigate Grammar – the same school as the Prime Minister – made the claim as he attacked the Government’s plans to charge VAT on private school fees

Rather than taxing private schools, the Prime Minister ‘should be finding ways to better exploit and share what they have’, and ‘to open them up to a wider demographic’, he wrote.

The introduction of VAT on private school fees is aimed at raising more money to fund state schools.

Schools in the state sector are faced with crumbling buildings made from Raac (reinforced autoclaved aerated concrete), staffing shortages and headteachers dealing with increasingly tight budgets.

A Government spokesman said: ‘Ending the VAT break for private schools means an additional £1.7 billion a year that can be invested in our state schools, where 94 per cent of this country’s children are educated.

‘This means more teachers, higher standards and the best chance in life for all our children, as we deliver on our plan for change.’

Reigate Grammar was funded by the local council when the Prime Minister joined, but became a private school two years into his time there

Reigate Grammar was funded by the local council when the Prime Minister joined, but became a private school two years into his time there