Australia election 2025 live: Dutton vows to cut 80,000 international students claiming it will reduce housing demand; Labor plans to cut home battery costs | Australian election 2025

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Australia election 2025 live: Dutton vows to cut 80,000 international students claiming it will reduce housing demand; Labor plans to cut home battery costs | Australian election 2025

Dutton says he will cut 80,000 international students, citing housing demand

Elections are – at least in part – battles over whose message wins the day. And today’s message battle is between solar batteries and international students.

Peter Dutton has announced today that under the Coalition, foreign student intakes will be cut by 80,000, in a plan aimed at reducing demand for housing.

The Daily Telegraph reports that the move will see a percentage cap – believed to be around 25% – set on universities, VET and the higher education sector, and will reduce the number of new international students from 320,000 in 2023 to about 240,000.

Dutton said on Sunday morning that the number of international students had contributed to driving up of rents, particularly in Sydney and Melbourne.

The Coalition says it would cap student intake numbers at 30,000 lower than Labor. Photograph: Jacobs Stock Photography Ltd/Getty Images

Speaking about the announcement in Melbourne this morning, Dutton said:

International student numbers are up by 65% under this government over the last 12 months. We [will] put in place a cap which will be 30,000 lower than what Labor has in place or 80,000 lower than what the numbers were just a couple of years ago.

This is a very significant step that we’re taking. It is all about making sure that we do what we can to help young Australians get into home ownership more quickly and how we can help with the rental crisis that Labor’s created as well.

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Penny Wong says Australia to ‘stick with Aukus’ despite Trump tariffs

The foreign minister Penny Wong has said that the Australian government will stick with the Aukus submarine plan, despite the announcement of 10% tariffs of Australian exports to the United States, because “our strategic relationship and our alliance with the United States is bigger than a bad decision”.

“The second point I’d make is Aukus is critical to Australia’s defence capability. That’s why we are proceeding down this path. It’s also why the call for Mr Dutton to link defence into a trade dispute is so risky and so reckless as Prime Minister Howard pointed out himself,” Wong told ABC’s Insiders.

Asked whether the government should “stick with Aukus” regardless of the US president’s behaviour, she said: “We stick with Aukus because it’s in Australia’s national interests. As all defence decisions should be, as all economic decisions should be.”

Wong also said that the Trump tariffs showed the importance of Australia diversifying its trade relationships, saying Australia had “some agency here”.

We have some capacity to engage with other countries who also want to continue to see trade flow. We have a capacity to diversify our economic relationships.

We know that US exports from Australia is about 5% of our exports and that’s why we have got to continue to grow our exports with other countries. India, which has become our fourth largest export market, we see our south-east economic strategy which I talked about for the last couple of years, is so important and we’re seeing that develop and, of course, other trade agreements that we are in or pursuing.

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