Higher Education Support Amendment (Job-Ready Graduates and Supporting Regional and Remote Students) Bill 2020 - Second Reading - Speed things along
Passed by a small majority
No rebellions 49% attendance
Division last edited 9th Oct 2020 by mackay staff
The majority voted in favour of agreeing with the amendments requested by the Senate. This means that the bill will now return to the Senate, where they will decide whether to read it for a third time and therefore pass the bill.
This bill will implement part of the government's Job Ready Graduates Package and includes major proposed higher education funding changes, including how the government currently subsidises university tuition costs.
If successful in its current form, the bill will decrease the subsidy for most areas of the humanities and social science as well as in engineering, science, surveying, environmental studies and other areas. On the other hand, it will increase the subsidy for most health fields, education, mathematics and other areas. At the same time, the bill will set new maximum student contribution amounts, which means the degree costs for students are going to change significantly. Humanities, law and commerce degrees are going to increase in price while mathematics, agriculture and certain science degrees will decrease.
Sometimes, such as in the case of engineering, the changes appear somewhat contradictory: both the subsidy for engineering and the maximum student contribution rate is being reduced. According to Science and Technology Australia ("STA"):
...the proposed reduction of funding could risk the teaching of engineering especially at smaller or regional universities. The impact of the funding changes would also be particularly acute in the ‘heavy engineering’ disciplines – the teaching of which often involves expensive large-scale facilities and infrastructure. This affects fields such as mining engineering, petrochemical engineering, electrical engineering, heavy mechanical engineering and advanced manufacturing.
The most significant change will be in the cost of humanities degrees, which will go from being one of the cheapest subject areas to one of the most expensive.
According to the bills digest:
Analysis from the Centre for the Study of Higher Education at the University of Melbourne has estimated the overall impact of the proposed change:
University revenue for teaching would be reduced by nearly one billion dollars in 2021 and every year thereafter for the same domestic student load as in 2018 as a result of the funding caps imposed in 2018 and the 2021 funding cluster changes in Job-ready Graduates
In other words, the overall affect of the bill appears to be a reduction in government funding for the university sector.
Read more about the bill in the bills digest.
Nobody rebelled against their party.
Party | Votes | |
---|---|---|
Adam Bandt Melbourne Australian Greens | Absent | |
Australian Labor Party (47% turnout) | 0 Yes – 32 No | |
Anne Aly Cowan | No | |
Chris Bowen McMahon | No | |
Tony Burke Watson | No | |
Linda Burney Barton | No | |
Mark Butler Hindmarsh | No | |
Terri Butler Griffith | No | |
Jim Chalmers Rankin | No | |
Nick Champion Spence | No | |
Lisa Chesters Bendigo | No | |
Jason Clare Blaxland | No | |
Milton Dick Oxley | No | |
Joel Fitzgibbon Hunter | No | |
Mike Freelander Macarthur | No | |
Patrick Gorman Perth | No | |
Luke Gosling Solomon | No | |
Chris Hayes Fowler | No | |
Julian Hill Bruce | No | |
Ed Husic Chifley | No | |
Stephen Jones Whitlam | No | |
Catherine King Ballarat | No | |
Madeleine King Brand | No | |
Andrew Leigh Fenner | No | |
Richard Marles Corio | No | |
Kristy McBain Eden-Monaro | No | |
Shayne Neumann Blair | No | |
Fiona Phillips Gilmore | No | |
Tanya Plibersek Sydney | No | |
Amanda Rishworth Kingston | No | |
Michelle Rowland Greenway | No | |
Anne Stanley Werriwa | No | |
Meryl Swanson Paterson | No | |
Tony Zappia Makin | No | |
Anthony Albanese Grayndler | Absent | |
Sharon Bird Cunningham | Absent | |
Josh Burns Macnamara | Absent | |
Anthony Byrne Holt | Absent | |
Sharon Claydon Newcastle | Absent | |
Libby Coker Corangamite | Absent | |
Julie Collins Franklin | Absent | |
Pat Conroy Shortland | Absent | |
Mark Dreyfus Isaacs | Absent | |
Justine Elliot Richmond | Absent | |
Steve Georganas Adelaide | Absent | |
Andrew Giles Scullin | Absent | |
Ged Kearney Cooper | Absent | |
Matt Keogh Burt | Absent | |
Peter Khalil Wills | Absent | |
Emma McBride Dobell | Absent | |
Brian Mitchell Lyons | Absent | |
Rob Mitchell McEwen | Absent | |
Daniel Mulino Fraser | Absent | |
Peta Murphy Dunkley | Absent | |
Brendan O'Connor Gorton | Absent | |
Clare O'Neil Hotham | Absent | |
Julie Owens Parramatta | Absent | |
Alicia Payne Canberra | Absent | |
Graham Perrett Moreton | Absent | |
Joanne Ryan Lalor | Absent | |
Bill Shorten Maribyrnong | Absent | |
David Smith Bean | Absent | |
Warren Snowdon Lingiari | Absent | |
Susan Templeman Macquarie | Absent | |
Matt Thistlethwaite Kingsford Smith | Absent | |
Kate Thwaites Jagajaga | Absent | |
Maria Vamvakinou Calwell | Absent | |
Tim Watts Gellibrand | Absent | |
Anika Wells Lilley | Absent | |
Josh Wilson Fremantle | Absent | |
Rebekha Sharkie Mayo Centre Alliance | Yes | |
Mark Coulton Parkes Deputy Speaker | Yes | |
Helen Haines Indi Independent | Yes | |
Zali Steggall Warringah Independent | No | |
Andrew Wilkie Clark Independent | Absent | |
Bob Katter Kennedy Katter's Australian Party | Absent | |
Liberal National Party (25% turnout) | 1 Yes – 0 No | |
Phillip Thompson Herbert | Yes | |
Angie Bell Moncrieff | Absent | |
Julian Simmonds Ryan | Absent | |
Terry Young Longman | Absent | |
Liberal Party (53% turnout) | 29 Yes – 0 No | |
Karen Andrews McPherson | Yes | |
Bridget Archer Bass | Yes | |
Peter Dutton Dickson | Yes | |
Warren Entsch Leichhardt | Yes | |
Jason Falinski Mackellar | Yes | |
Paul Fletcher Bradfield | Yes | |
Nicolle Flint Boothby | Yes | |
Josh Frydenberg Kooyong | Yes | |
Ian Goodenough Moore | Yes | |
Alex Hawke Mitchell | Yes | |
Greg Hunt Flinders | Yes | |
Sussan Ley Farrer | Yes | |
Melissa McIntosh Lindsay | Yes | |
Scott Morrison Cook | Yes | |
Ted O'Brien Fairfax | Yes | |
Tony Pasin Barker | Yes | |
Christian Porter Pearce | Yes | |
Melissa Price Durack | Yes | |
Rowan Ramsey Grey | Yes | |
Stuart Robert Fadden | Yes | |
Dave Sharma Wentworth | Yes | |
Michael Sukkar Deakin | Yes | |
Angus Taylor Hume | Yes | |
Dan Tehan Wannon | Yes | |
Bert Van Manen Forde | Yes | |
Ross Vasta Bonner | Yes | |
Tim Wilson Goldstein | Yes | |
Ken Wyatt Hasluck | Yes | |
Trent Zimmerman North Sydney | Yes | |
John Alexander Bennelong | Absent | |
Katie Allen Higgins | Absent | |
Kevin Andrews Menzies | Absent | |
Russell Broadbent Monash | Absent | |
Scott Buchholz Wright | Absent | |
David Coleman Banks | Absent | |
Vince Connelly Stirling | Absent | |
Trevor Evans Brisbane | Absent | |
Celia Hammond Curtin | Absent | |
Andrew Hastie Canning | Absent | |
Luke Howarth Petrie | Absent | |
Steve Irons Swan | Absent | |
Craig Kelly Hughes | Absent | |
Andrew Laming Bowman | Absent | |
Julian Leeser Berowra | Absent | |
Gladys Liu Chisholm | Absent | |
Nola Marino Forrest | Absent | |
Fiona Martin Reid | Absent | |
Ben Morton Tangney | Absent | |
Gavin Pearce Braddon | Absent | |
James Stevens Sturt | Absent | |
Alan Tudge Aston | Absent | |
Andrew Wallace Fisher | Absent | |
Lucy Wicks Robertson | Absent | |
Rick Wilson O'Connor | Absent | |
Jason Wood La Trobe | Absent | |
National Party (60% turnout) | 9 Yes – 0 No | |
Darren Chester Gippsland | Yes | |
Damian Drum Nicholls | Yes | |
Andrew Gee Calare | Yes | |
David Gillespie Lyne | Yes | |
Barnaby Joyce New England | Yes | |
David Littleproud Maranoa | Yes | |
Michael McCormack Riverina | Yes | |
Ken O'Dowd Flynn | Yes | |
Keith Pitt Hinkler | Yes | |
George Christensen Dawson | Absent | |
Pat Conaghan Cowper | Absent | |
Kevin Hogan Page | Absent | |
Michelle Landry Capricornia | Absent | |
Llew O'Brien Wide Bay | Absent | |
Anne Webster Mallee | Absent | |
Tony Smith Casey Speaker | Absent | |
Totals (50% turnout) | 42 Yes – 33 No |
Turnout is the percentage of members eligible to vote that did vote.