SOURCE: PHILLIP MINNIS/SHUTTERSTOCK.COM
The Liberal-National Coalition, led by former Rhodes scholar Tony Abbott, recorded a convincing victory in Saturday鈥檚 general election over Kevin Rudd鈥檚 Labor government.
Last week, the Coalition said that it will carry out an audit of 鈥渋ncreasingly ridiculous research grants鈥 funded by the Australian Research Council, and proposed to 鈥渞eprioritise鈥 A$103 million of ARC funding to where it is 鈥渞eally needed鈥. It has also pledged to boost spending in medical research by A$190 million.
Coalition figures gave four examples of 鈥渞idiculous鈥 projects: an RMIT University study looking at how people could adapt to climate change through public art, a University of Sydney project examining 鈥淭he God of Hegel鈥檚 Post-Kantian idealism鈥, a Macquarie University investigation of 鈥渟exuality in Islamic interpretations of reproductive health technologies in Egypt鈥 and an ARC project examining the meaning of 鈥淚鈥 through the study of 18th and 19th century German existentialists.
Mr Abbott was health minister in the previous Coalition government, led by John Howard and one of the Coalition鈥檚 first pledges of this election campaign was to protect the budget of the National Health and Medical Research Council and streamline its grant application process.
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Other pledges made by the Coalition have included a revived 鈥淐olombo Plan鈥, which would provide funding for 300 Australian students to study in Asia every year, and a plan to boost international student recruitment by expanding post-study work rights.
However, the Coalition has declined to reverse a A$2.3 billion cut to higher education imposed by the Labor government in April to pay for school reforms.
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Before the election, Jeannie Rea, national president of the National Tertiary Education Union, predicted that a new Coalition government was likely to reprise the Howard government鈥檚 鈥渄readful past record on cutting back on higher education funding, interfering in university independence and slugging the students with increased fees鈥.
The union also declined to support Labor鈥檚 re-election, and instead spent A$1 million on an unsuccessful campaign to see the sector-friendly Greens retain the balance of power in Australian鈥檚 upper house. The balance will now be held by a combination of the Greens and an assortment of small right-wing parties.
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