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Labor unveils $2.5 billion higher-education plan

A Labor government would increase the number of students completing their university studies by 20,000 each year from 2018, as part the party’s new higher education policy worth more than $2.5 billion, education spokesman Kim Carr announced.

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One Comment

  1. what difference does it make? our last two parties said whatever they had to get into power and the dropped the whole lot when when the first bad report on debt and economic growth came out… why should we expect Shorten to be any different? Not least because he was part of one of the parties that shot down so many of their own promises when reality struck.

    There needs to be some sort of punishment in place for pollies that do that.. if they break a promise to the public, half a million votes to them get added to the opposition unless it’s a bipartisan decision. At that point I imagine it will all get very honest.

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