Cost of studying humanities to double. Somyurek saga continues. Australia helps water down UN racism inquiry.
June 19, 2020
GIVE THE GIFT OF CRIKEY | TIP OFF | VIEW IN BROWSER
Crikey

Good morning, early birds.

Education Minister Dan Tehan will today announce plans to double the cost of studying humanities, and the fallout from Adem Somyurek’s branch stacking scandal continues to intensify.

It's the news you need to know.

Chris Woods
Reporter

 
Ad
 

FEE SHAKEUP

Education Minister Dan Tehan will today announce plans to double the cost of studying humanities, cut fees for quote-unquote “job-relevant” courses, and fund an extra 39,000 places by 2023.

Continuing the sector’s proud trend towards commodification, the ABC and The Age report that fees for law and commerce subjects would jump by 28%, humanities would join them in the highest price band, while prices will fall for nursing, psychology, English, languages, teaching, agriculture, maths, science, health, environmental science and architecture.

ALSO, THERE ARE NO JOBS: Following news that almost one million Australians are officially unemployed, The Age reports that JobKeeper will undergo some kind of revamp and potentially survive past September, while JobSeeker may not, in fact, go back to the below-poverty rate of $40 a day.

IT'S BEEN LIKE 4 DAYS, ADEM, LET IT GO

In the latest fallout from the Adem Somyurek scandal:

  • The Australian ($) has released more texts from Labor MP Anthony Byrne, including one showing that the former Somyurek ally planned to meet a reporter to “destroy a guys (sic) career”
  • Somyurek has told reporters outside his house that, “everything I know now about branch work, Anthony taught me” (The Canberra Times)
  • Victorian unions including the CFMMEU and the plumbers’ union have hit out at plans for Labor’s national executive committee to decide state preselection, and have not ruled out legal action if negotiations for a compromise deal fail (The Age)
  • The federal shadow cabinet has adopted a communication strategy from Anthony Albanese that would force all MPs to request permission from the opposition leader’s office before speaking to the media until after the Eden-Monaro byelection (The Australian $).

Somyurek has also told The Herald Sun ($) he’s looking forward to bringing court action against people involved in recording him, as if that wasn’t already kind of clear.

PS: In their latest expense expose, The Guardian reports that Eric Abetz billed taxpayers to attend a 2018 gala mining industry event he argues was in the interests of his electorate.

AUSTRALIA HELPS WATER DOWN UN ANTI-RACISM INQUIRY

According to The Australian ($), the Morrison government has worked as something of a proxy for the Trump administration in helping water down a UN Human Rights Council inquiry into America’s police brutality and racism following the killing of George Floyd.

The UNHRC — which the US quit over an inquiry into Israel’s May 2018 Gaza massacre — have reportedly shifted to a motion acknowledging Floyd’s death and calling for the UN’s High Commissioner for Human Rights to simply examine global racism; ironically, as explained by the Oz, Australia argued that the UN should not be given a mandate to investigate a “free, open country”.

CAN’T WIN ‘EM ALL, DONALD: As the ABC reports, the Supreme Court has rejected a bid by Trump to end protections for 650,000 immigrants who arrived as undocumented children — aka Obama’s “Dreamers” — just days after the court banned discrimination against LGBTIQ workers.

STATE VIRUS WATCH: SEE YOU IN THE NT ON JULY 17

  •  

Our journalism usually sits behind a paywall, but we believe this is the time to make more of our content freely available to as many readers as possible.

That’s why we’ve launched a new, free newsletter: COVID-19 Watch.

Sign up   >
 
THEY REALLY SAID THAT?

[On being told by Speaker Tony Smith to withdraw an imputation]: Mr Speaker, I was not impugning a motive to the Leader of the Opposition. Mr Speaker, I was referring to the word ‘corruption’ which was used by the Member for Holt, to explain the investigation underway. That’s what I was referring to and going on, Mr Speaker, to explain in my answer… [goes on like this for a bit]… But Mr Speaker to assist you, and to respect your ruling…

— Scott Morrison

The prime minister is very, very okay with being handed a ruling by the Speaker of the House of Representatives — and a Liberal MP that’s clearly no one’s stooge.

CRIKEY RECAP

Ann Marie Smith’s death triggered a taskforce. Why hasn’t David Harris’? 
Amber Schultz

“An urgent state government review into the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS), prompted by the death of South Australian woman Ann Marie Smith, has found huge gaps in the system.

“The final report is expected to include details on the death of David HarrisCrikey has been told, who died last year in NSW after being cut off from multiple disability support services.”

Donald Trump Ukraine Joe Biden Six-trillion-dollar man: Trump is the worst economic manager in US history
Alan Austin

“The trajectory towards ‘worst ever’ was set well before the COVID-19 virus devastated the world. Deterioration was evident soon after Trump’s tax cuts took effect in early 2018. This has been masked by an extraordinarily successful campaign of mendacious tweets claiming the economy is ‘best ever’ and ‘world’s greatest’.”

Narendra Modi India election religious persecution election After travelling the world, COVID-19 is sowing chaos in India
Michael Sainsbury

“First Wuhan, then Bergamo, followed by New York and London. Now India’s financial hub of Mumbai has become the latest metropolitan epicentre of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Mumbai has become the poster child of the virus’ toll in India, though many other parts of the country are now feeling its weight. Indian infections have passed 325,000, and in the past week cases have spiked in the capital Delhi. Between them the two cities are home to nearly 40 million people.”

 
Ad
 

READ ALL ABOUT IT

Banks plan bigger payouts to end fee scandal ($)
Age editor Alex Lavelle departs less than a week after staff voiced discontent
Reserve Bank considered asking private firms to hide data about slumping property prices
NSW warned of $7 billion infrastructure shortfall
Victoria to get extra federal seat, NT and WA to lose one each
Ministers fume over Virgin salvage plans ($)
Claims major projects are being delayed by environmental ‘lawfare’ dismissed in new research
Unions reject PM’s work rule fix for job carnage ($)
Minister met with alcohol lobby before pregnancy warning label sent back for review
‘Completely counterproductive’: Employers warn minimum wage rise could cost nearly $5 billion

Know an early bird who doesn’t get the worm?
Show them what they’re missing and share this email with a friend and let them know they can get a free trial here.

 

THE COMMENTARIAT

Lack of reconciliation remains our crowning failureWaleed Aly (The Sydney Morning Herald): “History’s a funny thing. It gives the impression of being fixed, chiselled into monuments and memorials, but it really exists as a matter of storytelling. What ends up mattering most is who gets to tell what stories, and what value the rest of us choose to give them. That’s why the string of vandalised statues of colonial figures we’re seeing (with the occasional demand they be torn down) seems to elicit such a different official response than the physical destruction of ancient, sacred Indigenous sites by mining companies across the country does.”

Labor party’s dirty linen on display at bad time for Anthony AlbaneseMichelle Grattan (The Conversation): “The notion that Nine’s 60 Minutes revelations about the appalling shenanigans of Victorian Labor power broker Adem Somyurek were a total surprise to ALP insiders deserves a horse laugh. As one federal source says, anyone with any knowledge of the party’s factions knew this character ran the right in Victoria, based on branch stacks. It was one of those things treated as — well — normal.”

‘Democracy is dead’, MPs declare, as politicians ‘bought and sold’Asher Moses (Voice of Action): “The Coalition government and Labor opposition are teaming up to weaken political donations and environmental protection laws while also reducing the ability of the crossbench to hold the major parties to account. The deal to restrict the number of motions per crossbench senator to one per week has united the independents and minor parties from the Greens to One Nation, who believe it is a blatant attempt to reduce scrutiny.”

HOLD THE FRONT PAGE

WHAT’S ON TODAY

Canberra

  • Education Minister Dan Tehan will present “Job-Ready Graduates” at the National Press Club.

Sydney

  • The NSW Service for the Treatment and Rehabilitation of Torture and Trauma Survivors (STARTTS) will present their 2020 annual humanitarian awards.

Melbourne

  • As Refugee Week 2020 wraps up, rallies will be held at the State Library of Victoria — as well as other sites across the country — demanding the end of seven-years’ worth of indefinite detention for former/current offshore detainees.

Australia

  • The Fair Work Commission will broadcast the handing down of the Annual Wage Review 2019–20 decision on their website.

For the first time ever, choose what you pay for a year of Crikey.

Like almost every news media out there, we thought we’d struggle to get through these past few months.

So we played our natural game – digging, reporting and holding the powerful to account.

What happened next was truly remarkable. Crikey readers signed up in droves and records were broken day after day, despite the strain the events of 2020 have put on our wallets.

We think it’s because people come to Crikey to understand the news.

While others focus on the day-to-day news cycle, we widen our lens to find out and understand what’s really going on.

But to do that, we need subscribers. Lots of them.

Join Crikey now, and for the first time ever, choose what you pay.

For a short time only, save up to 50% on a year of Crikey, or, chip in a little extra and get Inside Access to Crikey HQ like never before.

 

Peter Fray
Editor-In-Chief of Crikey

Join Now
 
 
Crikey
Review your subscription preferences
COPYRIGHT © 2020 PRIVATE MEDIA OPERATIONS PTY LTD, PUBLISHERS OF CRIKEY.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.