A Sir Keir Starmer cabinet would likely be the most representative of the nation in history, with more than eight in 10 shadow ministers having attended comprehensive schools. Analysis by social mobility charity the found that 84 per cent of Labour鈥檚 current shadow team attended a state comprehensive school, while 6 per cent went to grammar school. Just one in 10 were privately educated. In England more broadly, around 90 per cent of pupils attend comprehensive schools. Although Starmer may move some of his top team around following his expected election victory, this suggests a sea-change on previous Conservative and even Labour administrations. The first coalition government cabinet in 2010 was 62 per cent privately educated. Of Theresa May鈥檚 first cabinet, 30 per cent went to independent schools. This proportion shot up again to almost two-thirds under Boris Johnson, Liz Truss and Rishi Sunak. Tony Blair and Gordon Brown鈥檚 Labour governments saw around a third of the cabinet coming from private school backgrounds, Sutton Trust research shows. Clement Attlee鈥檚 cabinet in 1945 was 25 per cent privately educated. All four members of Labour鈥檚 shadow education team with responsibility for some element of schools policy went to comprehensive schools. ‘A significant changing of the guard’ Writing for Schools Week this year, Public First partner Ed Dorrell said the make-up of Starmer鈥檚 top team 鈥渞epresents a really significant changing of the guard 鈥 a historic transformation in the way we鈥檙e governed鈥. 鈥淭his is a generation of young politicians who got on in life (yes, yes, mainly via Oxford) often from personal circumstances that in previous generations would have made such advancement very difficult. Dr Nuala Burgess 鈥淭hey will all say, correctly, that they owed an enormous amount to the teachers and the teaching that they experienced at comprehensive school, a school type that is still too often maligned at the top of both media and politics.鈥 He said the shadow cabinet 鈥渄on鈥檛 hark back to a bygone era of grammar school education or indeed fetishise the great public schools. 鈥淐omprehensive education worked for them, and they will want it to work for even more young people.鈥 While the Blair government was 鈥渕ore or less begging the biggest independent schools鈥 to open secondary academies, a Labour government is looking to 鈥渢ax, tax, tax鈥 the sector. Dr Nuala Burgess, chair of the Comprehensive Future campaign group, said: 鈥淭he idea that a private or grammar school education is necessary to succeed is a nonsense. 鈥淲e hope that the new shadow cabinet will fully support inclusive schools by providing the funding and policies to allow our state schools to thrive. Now, more than ever, we need a properly thought out and generously funded state education system.鈥