Porter stood for the Presidency of the NUS as the candidate of the
Organised Independents faction, but is a member of the
Labour Party. He was subsequently elected with a 65% majority and took office in June 2010, which he would hold for the period of one year. and stated he would lead a national demonstration against the government's
planned rise in tuition fees before any vote in Parliament on the issue. Backing a
graduate tax as an alternative method of financing higher education, Porter stated that funding would need to be fair and progressive for students to support it. A keynote speech on the future of higher education warned of the implications of a funding crisis. He has also been vocal on the issue of graduate employment with significant national coverage. Porter appeared widely in the media including the
Daily Politics television show,
Newsnight and also on
BBC Question Time, arguing against the raising of students' tuition fees. In response to the review of Higher Education Funding and Student Finance chaired by
Lord Browne, the
National Union of Students organised a
National Demonstration in London jointly with the
University and College Union. 50,000 protestors took part in the protest, at the end of which Porter addressed a
rally outside
Tate Britain. During the immediate aftermath of this demonstration on 10 November 2010, by over 50,000 people, Porter condemned the occupation of the
Conservative Party's
headquarters, referring to it as "violence by a tiny minority". In January 2011 at an anti-cuts march and rally in Manchester, Porter was escorted away by police from a small section of the crowd of student protesters who were
heckling and shouting "you're a Tory too" – a chant commonly used against Liberal Democrats during the
student fees protests. There was also a report claiming their photographer had overheard anti-semitic abuse, despite Porter not being Jewish. In February 2011 Porter said he had decided not to seek re-election for Presidency of the
NUS, stating he felt the Union would benefit from new leadership. ==Post-Presidency==