Following the
2010 general election, Prime Minister
David Cameron appointed Willetts as the Minister of State for Universities and Science.(attending Cabinet)
Feminism claim In June 2011, Willetts said during the launch of the Government's
social mobility strategy that movement between the classes had "stagnated" over the past 40 years, and Willetts attributed this partly to the entry of women into the workplace and universities for the lack of progress for men. "Feminism trumped
egalitarianism", he said . He went on to say that, "One of the things that happened over that period was that the entirely admirable transformation of opportunities for women meant that with a lot of the expansion of education in the 1960s, '70s and '80s, the first beneficiaries were the daughters of middle-class families who had previously been excluded from educational opportunities [...] And if you put that with what is called 'assortative mating' – that well-educated women marry well-educated men – this transformation of opportunities for women ended up magnifying social divides. It is delicate territory because it is not a bad thing that women had these opportunities, but it widened the gap in household incomes because you suddenly had two-earner couples, both of whom were well-educated, compared with often workless households where nobody was educated".
Tuition fees and student loan debts As the minister responsible for universities, Willetts was an advocate and spokesperson for the
coalition government's policy of increasing the cap on
tuition fees in England and Wales from £3,225 to £9,000 per year. In November 2013, Willetts announced the sale of student loans to
Erudio Student Loans – a debt collection consortium – removing £160m from
public debt but ignoring the implications for former students. As Universities Minister he marked the fiftieth anniversary of the Robbins Report with a pamphlet proposing the end of controls on the number of students to be admitted to each university – subsequently announced in the Chancellor's Autumn Statement of December 2013.
Science Minister As Science Minister Willetts protected the science budget from proposed cuts and secured a ring-fenced five-year settlement. He created the network of Catapults, as proposed in reports by Herman Hauser and James Dyson. He secured a mission to the Space Station for Tim Peake. He identified the eight great technologies which were then funded with £600m over five years. He negotiated the first systematic use of overseas development funding for research partnerships with emerging scientific powers, the Newton Fund.
Peerage and further ventures In July 2014, Willetts announced that he would not contest the
next general election, saying that "after more than 20 years the time has come to move onto fresh challenges." In October 2014, Willetts was appointed a visiting professor at
King's College London. It was announced that he was to be a
life peer in the
2015 Dissolution Honours and was created Baron Willetts, of
Havant in the
County of Hampshire, on 16 October 2015. In June 2015, Willetts was appointed executive chair of the think tank the
Resolution Foundation. He was Chair of the British Science Association from 2015 to 2018. He served on the Board of UKRI from its creation in 2018 to 2024. In May 2018 he was elected an Honorary Fellow of the
Royal Society. In December 2018 he became Chair of the Foundation for Science and Technology. In February 2022 he was appointed a director of the Synbioven investment fund. In April 2022 he was appointed chair of the board of the
UK Space Agency. In early 2019, he co-founded the group
Right to Vote. ==Free votes record==