Two years after he introduced a law to end ministerial vetoes of research projects, Australian education minister Jason Clare has quashed 13 grants on national security grounds.
Clare told parliament that he had directed the Australian Research Council (ARC) Board not to approve funding for the 13 projects 鈥渇or reasons relevant to the security, defence or international relations of Australia鈥.
The order affects six applications that the ARC Board had intended to fund under Discovery Projects, the primary scheme for supporting fundamental research.
Funding has also been refused for five applications to the Linkage Projects programme, which bankrolls collaborative research, and two to the Linkage Infrastructure, Equipment and Facilities stream, which supports universities and industry to share their research hardware.
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The ARC it would provide no details about the affected applications 鈥渇or national interest reasons鈥.
The grants are the first to be vetoed since an amendment to the ARC Act, passed by parliament in March 2024, transferred approval powers for research grants to the newly created ARC Board.
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Under the changes, the education minister retained responsibility for approving grants of nationally significant scale. The minister also gained the authority to direct the board to quash grants that aroused national security concerns.
Clare that the new law would 鈥渆nd the days of ministers using the ARC as a political plaything鈥, after the agency had been 鈥渂edevilled鈥 by political interference and ministerial delays for years.
鈥淭hat has made it harder for universities to recruit and retain staff, and it has damaged our international reputation,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 not good for our universities [or] businesses鈥ho work with universities.鈥
The reform came after a succession of Liberal Party education ministers 鈥 Brendan Nelson, Simon Birmingham and Stuart Robert 鈥 vetoed a total of 27 grants for approved humanities and social science research projects, deeming them a waste of money.
Outgoing Liberal education minister Dan Tehan also rejected five Discovery Projects grants on undisclosed national security grounds. Tehan had earlier reserved his decision on whether to approve 18 grants, pending advice from security agencies.
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The Labor government鈥檚 election in 2022 also put an end to protracted delays that had plagued researchers for years, largely because the results of grant applications were kept under wraps until they had been announced by politicians.
However, the delays have recently re-emerged as the ARC intensified its checks to ensure that the proposed projects posed no security concerns 鈥 a response considered overkill by some insiders.
While the minister鈥檚 remaining veto power is seen by some as a second line of defence, enabling consideration of security concerns that become apparent through cabinet processes, the ARC has interpreted it as a responsibility to pre-emptively inform the minister about any potential threat.
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Clare confirmed this interpretation in a 鈥溾 to the agency in March. 鈥淎RC-supported activities [must] advance, and not compromise, Australia鈥檚 security, defence and international relations,鈥 it says. 鈥淚 expect the ARC, working with the Department of Education, to provide proactive advice on鈥hese matters, informed by consultation with relevant鈥ecurity agencies.
鈥淚 expect the ARC to focus on addressing threats of espionage and foreign interference affecting Australia鈥檚 research sector. This includes continually improving processes to identify and assess risks.鈥
Clare also urged the ARC to back research that 鈥渟upports our inclusive national identity built around our shared values including democracy, the rule of law, basic freedoms and the fair go. I expect the ARC Board to have strong regard for relevant hate speech and anti-discrimination laws, including applicants鈥 past compliance with these obligations.鈥
The ARC has published a new 鈥溾 explaining how it meets these obligations. The agency applies four 鈥渞esearch security principles鈥 and explores at least 11 鈥渞isk indicators鈥 that could signal threats to security, defence or international relations.
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The document also outlines the responsibilities of universities and individual researchers, including disclosure obligations and the consequences for not meeting them.
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