The New Zealand Herald

Brownlee: No chance of reversal

Foreign Minister doesn’t expect change of mind in Oz over uni fee hikes for Kiwis

- Isaac Davison in Sydney

New Zealand has virtually no chance of convincing Australia to change its mind on massive hikes to Kiwi expatriate­s’ university fees, Foreign Minister Gerry Brownlee has conceded ahead of bilateral talks today.

In his first assignment in foreign affairs, Brownlee will meet his Australian counterpar­t Julie Bishop in Sydney this morning, where he plans to discuss not only the controvers­ial education proposals but also the broader decline of the transtasma­n relationsh­ip.

Asked whether there was any possibilit­y of reversing the tertiary education proposals or getting an exemption for New Zealanders, Brownlee said: “I don’t believe so.

“It’s a Budget move and so the chances of getting them to say ‘Okay we’ve made a balls-up here, we’ll just allow a whole lot more New Zealanders to come through’ [are slim].”

The New Zealand Government has reacted angrily to the latest changes, which were announced three days ago with little warning. But Brownlee said New Zealand protests had not registered in Australia because the changes affected local students as well, although not to the same degree.

“The reason this hasn’t registered as an issue in Australia is because every Australian student in a tertiary institutio­n will be paying more.”

With the higher fees all but set in stone, the bilateral talks are likely to focus on whether there are more changes in the pipeline which could penalise Kiwi expats, and the need for Australia to “communicat­e sooner” about policy changes affecting Kiwis.

It was the third policy in two years which penalised New Zealanders, all of which had caught the Government off-guard, Brownlee said.

In November 2015, Australia revoked the visas of some excriminal­s no matter how long they had lived in Australia. It forced New Zealand to quickly change the law to allow the flood of deportees to be monitored when they returned.

Two weeks ago, Australia announced stricter citizenshi­p rules, lifting applicants’ wait times from a year to four years, again without notifying New Zealand.

And on Monday, Australia released its proposals to raise fees in universiti­es. It was another surprise for Prime Minister Bill English, who had not been told of the change despite speaking to his opposite Malcolm Turnbull on Friday.

Australian­s pay the same amount as Kiwis to study in NZ, and can access student loans once they have lived here for three years.

Brownlee said the latest changes were “not a basis for a collapse in the relationsh­ip”. But he said the traditiona­l alliance had changed since the days when New Zealanders could cross the Tasman without a passport.

“For decades post-World War I, the two countries treated each other’s citizens the same as if they were at home, very little difference. It’s sort of been a slow progressio­n to the separate, sovereign state sort of stuff.”

But NZ First leader Winston Peters said New Zealand should be apologisin­g to Australia. It had become a “bolthole” for people wanting to get into Australia through the back door.

 ??  ?? Matilda Boyce, 18, was dux of her high school last year but says she doesn’t feel valued in Oz.
Matilda Boyce, 18, was dux of her high school last year but says she doesn’t feel valued in Oz.

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