
Dutton playing ‘Donald Trump anti-migration card' in plan to slash international students, higher education peak body says
The Coalition has been accused of using the 'Donald Trump anti-migration card' with its election policy to slash international students, as the university sector warns it favours the private vocational education and training (VET) sector.
On Sunday, Peter Dutton announced he would reduce the number of international students to 240,000 a year, a reduction of 'over 80,000 in annual new overseas student commencements compared with 2023 levels', he said.
It would mean a cap of 115,000 commencements at publicly funded universities (which include the University of Sydney and University of Melbourne) and 125,000 combined across VET (including Tafe), private universities (including Bond University) and non-universities (including institutes of higher education and colleges).
Dutton also announced all public universities would have their percentage of foreign students capped at 'around 25%' – expected to disproportionately impact metropolitan institutions – and that the non-refundable student visa application would be hiked to $2,500, or $5,000 for Group of Eight (Go8) institutions.
Last July, Labor more than doubled the international student visa application fee from $710 to $1,600 – already making it the highest of all global competitor markets.
Speaking on Sunday, Dutton said the international student market was a 'great and lucrative' one for universities, adding 'they've made literally billions of dollars over the last few years'.
'Our problem is that it's been distortionary to the housing market,' he said – something experts have cast doubt on.
Sign up for the Afternoon Update: Election 2025 email newsletter
The CEO of the Go8, Vicki Thomson, said the Coalition's further visa hike 'makes no sense on any level', adding she learned of it in the media.
'It beggars belief that the Coalition would single out the Go8 for extra burden – Australia's top universities all ranked in the world's top 100 – that attract the best and brightest minds from our region and around the world,' she said.
'We have been talking about international students as a commodity. This is an isolationist policy agenda that is base politics at its worst.'
The International Education Association of Australia CEO, Phil Honeywood, said there had been no consultation with the sector on the policy proposal, accusing Dutton of playing the 'Donald Trump anti-migration card' to voters.
He said providing more punishing targets to publicly funded universities could be seen as 'punishment politics'.
'Many Coalition MPs argue public universities don't support them,' he said.
'Traditionally, the Coalition are more inclined to support independent providers over their public counterparts.'
The former senior immigration official, Abul Rizvi, said caps were an 'inherently poor policy tool' which did nothing to address student quality or the quality of courses.
'The biggest change the Coalition is proposing compared to Labor's student capping plan is an overseas student program that shifts the balance towards the private VET sector,' he said.
'That is the sector with the longest history of rorts and dodgy qualifications.'
Sign up to Afternoon Update: Election 2025
Our Australian afternoon update breaks down the key election campaign stories of the day, telling you what's happening and why it matters
after newsletter promotion
In 2023, a parliamentary inquiry heard the VET sector's reputation would be destroyed if urgent action was not taken to clean up malpractice among international education providers.
The committee heard of private providers working with unregulated international education agents to steal students from prestigious public institutions for massive commissions, sell work visas and open 'ghost schools' where students do not attend classes and get handed degrees.
Rizvi said the Coalition's additional cut of 30,000 international student places impacted publicly funded universities, while the private sector retained the same cap as Labor had proposed at 125,000.
'I don't know if [Dutton] has an axe to grind with the Go8, but why target the best universities in the country?' he said. 'Good students will think 'I don't want to go to that chaotic country'.
The Universities Australia CEO, Luke Sheehy, said the proposed cuts would 'take a sledgehammer' to one of Australia's biggest income generators, estimating a hit to the economy of more than $5bn, including $1.2bn at the Go8.
The Business Council of Australia chief executive, Bran Black, said the Coalition's proposed 25% foreign student cap would undermine a sector worth more than $50bn annually without improving the housing crisis.
'We're in a period of higher global and economic uncertainty, and so now is the time to prioritise growing successful sectors, such as education, where we already enjoy a competitive advantage,' he said.
'Enrolments there are now well below the imposed cap, and so Australia following this model risks impacting our fourth largest export.'
There were 376,731 student visas granted in 2023-24, a decrease of 34.7% compared with the same period in 2022-23 (577,295).
Since 2019, growth in enrolments has been highest in the VET sector (40%) while enrolments in higher education have grown by 13%.
The Independent Tertiary Education Council Australia (Iteca) was approached for comment.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
31 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Trump reveals Harvard University feud may be coming to an end as he floats 'historic' deal
President Donald Trump has teased that his months-long battle with Harvard University may soon be over, announcing that a deal could emerge 'over the next week or so.' Thus far, Harvard has been one of the main enemies of the Trump administration, which has lobbed numerous serious accusations at the Ivy League college and yanked billions of dollars in federal funding. The accusations range from the university not doing enough to constrain antisemitism on campus, to it admitting students with views hostile to American values. More than three months after the White House 's initial letter to the university calling for major reform, Trump appears optimistic that an agreement is possible. 'We have been working closely with Harvard, and it is very possible that a Deal will be announced over the next week or so,' Trump wrote Friday afternoon on Truth Social. 'They have acted extremely appropriately during these negotiations, and appear to be committed to doing what is right,' he added. 'If a Settlement is made on the basis that is currently being discussed, it will be 'mindbogglingly' HISTORIC, and very good for our Country.' Harvard hasn't publicly responded to Trump's sentiments. Daily Mail approached the university for comment. This comes as a federal judge blocked the Trump administration from revoking Harvard's ability to admit foreign students. On June 4, Trump issued an executive order called Enhancing National Security by Addressing Risks at Harvard University, which suspended the school's student visa program - calling it a 'privilege granted by our government, not a guarantee.' Harvard has nearly 6,800 international students, making up more than 27 percent of its enrollment in the past academic year. About one-third of those international students are from China, and Trump has previously accused Harvard of 'coordinating with the Chinese Communist Party,' a claim echoed in the executive order. Friday's preliminary injunction by US District Judge Allison Burroughs extends a prior temporary block she issued last month against the administration for stopping international students from coming to Harvard. Outside of Trump's fears about foreign influence on Harvard, he has also expressed concern that university leaders have fostered a breeding ground for antisemitism, making Jewish students feel uncomfortable and unsafe. A large encampment of pro-Palestine students protesting the Israel-Hamas war formed on Harvard Yard during the 2024 spring semester and lasted for three weeks. The students wanted the university to divest from the Israeli government and Israeli businesses, but the administration did not acquiesce. Even before the encampment in April and May of 2024, there were widespread protests at Harvard immediately following the Hamas' attack on Israel on October 7, 2023. One such protest descended into a confrontation where pro-Palestine demonstrators surrounded a Harvard MBA student and repeatedly shouted 'shame' at him. Claudine Gay, Harvard's president during much of this turmoil, resigned in January 2024 after she refused to condemn students calling for the genocide of Jews when pressed by members of Congress. Gay presided over billions of dollars in lost potential donations from wealthy Jewish families appalled by what took place on campus. That's now on top of the approximately $3.2 billion in grants and contracts Harvard has lost out on from the federal government since Trump took office. Harvard sued the Trump administration for the federal funding freeze and denies accusations of alleged bias against Jewish students. Lawyers for Harvard also argue that the attempted revocation of foreign student visas violates its free speech and due process rights under the US Constitution as well as the Administrative Procedure Act, a law that constrains what federal agencies are allowed to do. Harvard says the Trump administration is retaliating against it because it refused to obey the government's demands to control the school's governance, curriculum and the 'ideology' of its faculty and students. The federal government sent a letter to Harvard President Alan Garber on April 11 claiming that the school has 'failed to live up to both the intellectual and civil rights conditions that justify federal investment.' The letter demanded university leaders adopt merit-based admissions policies, stop admitting students who are 'hostile to American values', enforce viewpoint diversity in all academic departments, and immediately end all DEI programs. Officials explained that they wanted what amounted to progress reports on these goals sent to them so they could ensure that their orders were being followed.


The Sun
39 minutes ago
- The Sun
US deploys B-2 stealth bombers capable of firing bunker buster bombs needed to target Iran nuke reactor to military base
THE US has deployed B-2 stealth bombers - the warplanes capable of firing the deadly bunker buster bombs needed to target Iran's nuclear reactor. Donald Trump is all but poised to join Israel's campaign of bombing Iran as they both seek to obliterate Tehran's nuclear program – but currently has a two week deadline in place. 4 4 4 4 Six B-2 stealth bombers from Whiteman Air Force base in Missouri seem to be heading towards a US Air Force base in Guam, according to various flight tracking data, Fox News reports. The B-2 are the only bombers capable of carrying the terrifying Massive Ordnance Penetrator (MOP). At the heart of its nuclear program is the Fordow Fuel Enrichment Plant, which is encased in steel more than 300 feet beneath solid rock - and has so far escaped serious damage. Israel's arsenal lacks huge bunker buster bombs needed to destroy the underground enrichment facility - some 125 miles from capital Tehran. Only America currently has the fearsome GBU-57 bombs capable of blitzing Fordow - and only the B-2 can deliver them. Multiple strikes would still be needed to reach the fortified underground laboratories of Fordow, packed with centrifuge technology at the heart of Iran's Doomsday programme. The 20-foot-long monster bomb can explode to obliterate enemy targets that are often hidden beneath mountains and massive layers of rocks. Its 30,000lb weight means that its sheer kinetic force enables it to reach deeply buried targets – almost 200ft beneath the surface. It comes after Israel announced it had killed the Iranian military commander who funded the October 7 attacks which detonated the Middle East crisis in a revenge air strike. Evil terror kingpin Saeed Izadi - head of the Palestinian Division of Iran's Quds Force - was blown to bits in a pinpoint attack in the Iranian city of Qom. Israel Defence Force said Izadi was 'one of the architects' of the horror in which 1,200 died and 250 were kidnapped 'and among the few who knew of it prior to its execution.' Izadi was said to be a top money man in the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps who sent state cash Palestinian terror organizations in Gaza and the West Bank. The Israeli military later said that it killed another commander of the Guards' overseas arm identified as Benham Shariyari, during a strike on his vehicle in western Tehran. Shariyary was said to be "was responsible for all weapons transfers from the Iranian regime to its proxies across the Middle East". The ongoing cull of top Iranian commanders - and their replacements - gathered pace along with another assassination of a top nuclear boffins. IDF officials refused to identify the scientist said to play a vital role in the rogue Islamist regime's plans to build an atom bomb. He was killed by a missile fired from a drone after being moved to a 'safe house' - which Israeli intelligence located overnight. His death is the 11th assassination of a nuclear scientist in the past nine days in a special Israeli manhunt dubbed Operation Narnia.


Sky News
an hour ago
- Sky News
Pakistan says it will nominate Donald Trump for Nobel Peace Prize for resolving its conflict with India
Pakistan has said it would recommend Donald Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize for his work in helping to resolve the recent conflict between India and Pakistan. Some analysts in Pakistan have suggested the move might persuade the US president to reconsider potentially joining Israel in striking Iran's nuclear facilities. Pakistan has condemned Israel's attack on Iran as a violation of international law and said it threatens regional stability. 1:57 Last month a surprise announcement by Mr Trump of a ceasefire brought an end to a four-day conflict between India and Pakistan, two nuclear-armed states. The US president has repeatedly boasted of averting a nuclear war and saving millions of lives, and has complained about not getting enough credit. While Pakistan agrees US diplomatic intervention brought the fighting to an end, India has disputed that, saying it was a bilateral agreement between the two militaries. "President Trump demonstrated great strategic foresight and stellar statesmanship through robust diplomatic engagement with both Islamabad and New Delhi, which de-escalated a rapidly deteriorating situation," Pakistan said. "This intervention stands as a testament to his role as a genuine peacemaker." Mr Trump has long craved the Nobel Peace Prize, claiming he should have been awarded it for a variety of reasons. In a post on his Truth Social platform on Friday, the president gave a long list of conflicts he claimed he had resolved, including Pakistan and India and the Abraham accords in his first term between Israel and some Muslim-majority countries. "I won't get a Nobel Peace Prize no matter what I do," he added. Pakistan's announcement it would nominate Mr Trump comes in the same week as its army chief, Field Marshal Asim Munir, met the US president for lunch.