With tens of thousands of jobs on the line, it is outrageous that the government won’t lift a finger to help save livelihoods and the future of higher education.
Universities around the country are already cutting staff and courses in response to this crisis. As semester two approaches, this will only get worse.
Job & course cuts will have generational impacts on university teaching and research in our country.
University workers are being left high and dry by a government that has not only resisted providing them support, but put up extra barriers every step of the way during this crisis. It seems this government simply doesn’t care.
It’s time Minister Tehan provided a new funding package for universities and scrapped the unfair rules which have excluded every single university from qualifying for the JobKeeper payment.
Only with support for all workers, new funding and a plan for Free TAFE and uni for all can we rebuild as a more just society after this crisis.
Universities with large reserves must prioritise staff jobs in spending what money they have. Keeping university staff, including casuals, on payroll should be top of every Vice-Chancellor’s agenda in managing this crisis.
*Full statement on the NZ Royal Commission Report*
The Aotearoa New Zealand Royal Commission report into the Christchurch terrorist attack makes for disturbing reading. While there is still much to digest, a few things are clear at this point:
This was a terrorist attack committed by an Australian man who the report says was “driven by an extreme right-wing Islamophobic ideology”. Any denial or obfuscation of this simple fact is an insult to the victims.
The report’s findings & recommendations should be taken seriously in Australia, where the terrorist lived for most of his life. There are lessons here for the way we approach terrorism, security, online extremism, racial & religious hatred, social cohesion, & gun control
There is absolutely no case for drilling dirty fossil fuels off the beautiful coastline of New South Wales.
It was fantastic to be on a unity ticket with MPs from all sides of politics calling for federal Minister Pitt and NSW Minister Barilaro to reject PEP-11.
Huge thanks to Save Our Coast, the Surfrider Foundation everyone in the community who has been campaigning courageously to protect their coast, oceans and climate.
Drilling for fossil fuels risks irreversible damage to our coasts, oceans and the wonderful marine life that lives within. It will hurt local industries and communities that depend on our oceans and coasts.
It is a devastating prospect for our environment and climate.
The gambling-fuelled racing industry cannot be trusted or fixed. It’s time is up. We have to shut it down.
Over the years we’ve had assurances from racing authorities that they would take animal welfare seriously. More investigations, more commitments. There is no evidence that they have learned a single thing.
I stand with the Kashmiri community as they commemorate Black Day.
Kashmir is a disputed territory and it is now over a year since the Indian Government revoked its special status and further eroded Kashmiris’ right to self-determination.
Kashmir remains in lockdown and access to high speed internet is still blocked by the Indian Government.
The Indian Government must restore basic human rights in Kashmir, including freedom of speech. The Indian Government must withdraw its troops, end the restrictions placed on leaders, end arbitrary detentions and disappearances, and allow humanitarian organisations access.
Tomorrow the Liberals will push 1.8 million people below the poverty line by slashing the coronavirus supplement. At the same time they're planning more tax cuts for the rich.
Here's a thread of Aus PMs with billionaires and some income support facts. (Gina Rinehart, $15.3b)
With the stroke of a pen, ScoMo is more than halving the $550 a fortnight supplement. This cuts Youth Allowance too. And don't forget that Scott Morrison left disabled people and carers entirely out of the COVID stimulus package.
(Harry Triguboff, $9.3b)
With income support above the poverty line in recent months, recipients have reported eating properly for the first time in years, being able to find proper housing and a sense of security they didn't have before.
That's all being ripped away tomorrow. (Anthony Pratt, $7.2b)
The message from today's Senate Inquiry into Scott Morrison's plan is clear: the government needs to withdraw the bill and go back to the drawing board.
This important inquiry has brought to light widespread discontent across the sector. Students will face substantial fee increases and universities will have billions cut from their funding if this bill proceeds.