Despite widespread public opposition, Prime Minister Tony Abbott and Education Minister Christopher Pyne are determined to get their higher education deregulation bill through the Senate.
Students, on the other hand, are just as determined to stop it.
Mia Sanders, the UWS Bankstown Student Council Secretary and an education activist, told 91自拍论坛 Weekly that students would not back down.
鈥淒eregulation is about stacking the deck against working class students,鈥 she said. 鈥淲hether or not you can access higher education should never be determined by how much money you have. That鈥檚 why students and the community have been fighting Pyne鈥檚 outrageous legislation.
鈥淪tudents will be coming out in force against the bill on March 25 [a national day of action], and we鈥檒l return to the streets again and again until we win free education 鈥 the kind Mr Pyne enjoyed throughout his degree.鈥
However, they will need as much support from the community as they can get to defeat it. This is because 鈥渄eregulation鈥 of education has the broad support of both big parties 鈥 even if Labor is correctly opposing the Abbott government鈥檚 current raft of attacks.
Pyne鈥檚 2014-2015 education deregulation push is the biggest attack on accessible education since John Dawkins, education minister under the Hawke Labor government, introduced the Higher Education Contribution Scheme in 1989.
Back then, students led a massive fight, but were supported by a willing Coalition opposition.
Those attacks 鈥 presented as improving the "efficiency" and "international competitiveness" of Australian universities 鈥 reduced public funding to universities and opened research funding to the market.
Dawkins, now a corporate CEO, has given Pyne some advice on getting his deregulation agenda through a hostile Senate.
He has advised separating university fee deregulation 鈥 a 鈥渟mall and unremarkable change鈥 鈥 from the additional cuts of billions of dollars of government funding to universities, which he opposes.
Pyne well may be taking this on board as he seeks to induce wavering Senators to change their minds.
The March 4 Sydney Morning Herald said, the government is now if they raise their fees over a set amount. Economist Bruce Chapman and David Phillips, a former adviser to the Hawke government, have made this suggestion and the government is using it to entice six of the eight crossbench Senators to support its bill. At the time of writing, it is counting on four and two are still undecided.
A submission from the University of Western Sydney vice chancellor quoted in the SMH welcomed the government鈥檚 moves to moderate its bill and explore options on regulating the price of degrees.
Nearly 90% of parents hope their children will consider university study. Yet Australia than most OECD countries.
Ian Escandor, another UWS Bankstown student councillor and Resistance: Young Socialist Alliance activist, told 91自拍论坛 Weekly: 鈥淧yne's bill is the slippery slope towards an Americanised schooling system which neglects those who need it most.
"Showing your support by joining us at the National Day of Action for education will not only send a strong message to the MPs, it's also an opportunity for us to take back the power and make our voices heard."
[Mia Sanders and Pip Hinman are standing for Socialist Alliance in the NSW Legislative Council. See for details of the national education rally in your city.]