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Don鈥檛 axe Australia鈥檚 research grant veto powers: Senate panel

Parliamentarians clash on funding discretion and whether it should continue, but agree on need for ARC review

Published on
March 21, 2022
Last updated
March 21, 2022
Executioner's axe
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An Australian Senate committee has urged parliament not to remove the education minister鈥檚 discretion over research grants, even though scores of聽academics, scholarly societies and universities want ministerial 鈥渧eto鈥 powers constrained.

The Education and Employment Legislation Committee has recommended against passage of a聽Greens bill obliging the minister to聽approve grants endorsed by聽the Australian Research Council (ARC). The committee, which is聽dominated by聽senators from the ruling Liberal and National parties, said the government鈥檚 鈥渓egitimate and important role鈥 in determining the parameters for聽government-funded research was聽not limited to聽鈥済uidelines and processes only鈥.

A ministerial requirement to 鈥渞ubber-stamp鈥 grant recommendations would 鈥渆ssentially override the basic principle of responsible government鈥, the committee . Such a move would also prevent ministers from blocking funds for projects with 鈥渄ue diligence or national security concerns鈥 unknown to the ARC.

The report says vetoes are relatively rare, with just 1聽per cent of recently recommended projects failing to secure ministerial approval. 鈥淥n聽balance鈥he act in its present form serves the national interest by ensuring the minister remains accountable for the appropriate expenditure of government funds,鈥 it concludes.

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The committee鈥檚 Labor Party senators also supported the retention of ministerial veto as 鈥渁聽mechanism to facilitate the accountability of executive government鈥. But they backed an amendment to stop ministers exercising veto power 鈥渁rbitrarily鈥 to 鈥減oliticise the grant process鈥.

The Labor amendment would require the minister to present the 鈥渞easons, evidence and advice鈥 underpinning any decision not聽to approve grant recommendations within 15 parliamentary sitting days.

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Greens senator Mehreen Faruqi, the bill鈥檚 author, condemned the committee鈥檚 鈥渟hameless鈥 move 鈥渢o retain unnecessary power over research funding鈥 as a triumph of politics over policy. 鈥淏oth the government and Labor have refused to concede their political power to interfere with individual research grants,鈥 Dr聽Faruqi said.

鈥淒espite an overwhelming majority of contributors supporting the removal of the veto, the committee majority have relied selectively on evidence provided by a very small number of witnesses.鈥

In a recommending her bill鈥檚 passage, Dr Faruqi highlighted disagreement over whether ministerial veto applied to the ARC鈥檚 sister agency, the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC).

The NHMRC itself says its allocations are subject to ministerial discretion, echoing the view of the ARC and the federal education department. But legal opinions contradict this interpretation.

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Western Sydney University said the NHMRC聽Act was 鈥渁mbiguous鈥 on the question, with ministerial veto 鈥渘ot聽apparent from the legislation鈥. The University of Tasmania said veto power was inconsistent with a legislative clause limiting ministerial intervention in funding decisions to 鈥渄irection鈥f a general nature鈥.

All three political groupings backed calls for a review of the ARC. Government senators said the review should take into account the directions already issued to the ARC in acting education minister Stuart Robert鈥檚 鈥letter of聽expectations鈥 last December.

Labor said the review should focus on the ARC鈥檚 鈥済overnance framework, reporting mechanisms and internal administrative processes鈥. The Greens said the review should consider 鈥渢he boost to public funding required to ensure the ARC can fund all worthy projects鈥s determined via peer review鈥.

john.ross@timeshighereducation.com

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