12 August 2025

'Day of Rage': ANU students blockade the Chancelry as opposition to cuts continues

| By Nicholas Ward
Join the conversation
37
ANU protestors voted to blockade the Chancellery

“VC Bell rot in hell, take your weapons there as well.” Protestors chanted as they marched on the Chancelry. Photo: Nicholas Ward.

ANU Students from Save Our Studies voted to blockade the Vice-Chancellor’s offices this week as part of their “Day of Rage” protest against the university’s ongoing cuts.

The group had demanded a response from the university late last month, warning they would escalate protests if they did not hear back.

According to the protestors, the administration has refused to engage with them at all.

The Day of Rage marked the first step in their promised escalation. Protestors marched from University Avenue to the Chancelry Building, chanting slogans calling for an end to cuts, and for the institution to get rid of VC Genevieve Bell and Chancellor Julie Bishop.

READ ALSO Chancellor Julie Bishop allegedly stopped university council from holding vote to pause Renew ANU

Sociology honours student Pippa Newman, who was at the front of the march, said that the protests would keep escalating until the university responded.

“We basically pledged to escalate our actions today if we didn’t hear back from them by August 7, and we haven’t had anything from the university,” she said.

“We want to disrupt business as usual at the university, make it very clear that we’re here and we’re here to say, and this is the sort of action that we’ll be continuing to do if ANU continues as they’re going and they don’t stop the cuts.”

ANU protesters block the front of the Chancellery

ANU protesters have vowed to escalate their actions until the university responds. (Left to right: Elliane Boulton, Elian Dears, Dash Ridley Griffiths, Remi Prica, Pippa Newman and Beatrice Tucker.) Photo Nicholas Ward.

Maya and Zoe were two banner carriers who brought up the rear. They said they were marching not just against cuts but also against the militarisation of university research.

Maya said she believed that the university was losing its way.

“We’re seeing course cuts all across the university, and teachers and friends have been losing their jobs, and also we’re fighting the militarisation and corporatisation at the university as well,” said Maya.

Her friend Zoe said gutting the university wouldn’t be in the best interest of Australia, and that for many, the education they had come to the ANU for was no longer on offer.

“The major that I was promised when I started this degree is now crumbling, being wrenched away from me … if these cuts go ahead, I won’t be able to do the courses that I had planned to do,” said Zoe.

Once at the Chancelry, students shouted slogans and gave speeches calling for a sit-in of the building until the administration came to the table.

By a show of hands, they voted to blockade the building, in the hopes of bringing the administration to the table.

Around 70 students took part in the march, but not everyone joined the sit-in. Those who did were confident that they could eventually force the university to the bargaining table.

READ ALSO Tender out for temporary Belconnen green-waste facility but uncertainty to continue

Philosophy student Finnian Colwell, who gave an impassioned speech at the Chancelry, said he hopes the protests can channel the energy of successful demonstrations in the past.

“We’ve tried to make sure the Vice Chancellor listens to reason. Ninety-three per cent of staff voted no confidence in Genevieve Bell, but she’s shown that she’s willing to just destroy lives,” he said.

“We have a long way to go before we can match the energy that the students in the ’70s had. But I think that the crisis of the political situation we’re in right now means that there is a real opportunity to fight back against what’s happening.”

After the main protest event wound down, protestors held a “teach-in” for the rest of the day, with speeches, screen printing, musical performances and banner painting.

The wide-ranging austerity program initiated by Vice Chancellor Bell to tackle the university’s growing deficit has proved controversial, with students, faculty, and some politicians coming out against the cuts.

The protests come as senior executives and academics at the university have been called before a Senate inquiry into university governance.

For the protestors, the message is clear: the university is going in the wrong direction.

”This isn’t the first time we have fought back against cuts at this university, and we are committed to disrupting business as usual at the university until management and the government accede to our demands,” Pippa said, summing up the attitude of the students.

Free Daily Digest

Want the best Canberra news delivered daily? We package the most-read Canberra stories and send them to your inbox. Sign-up now for trusted local news that will never be behind a paywall.
Loading
By submitting your email address you are agreeing to Region Group's terms and conditions and privacy policy.

Join the conversation

37
All Comments
  • All Comments
  • Website Comments
LatestOldest

Lift the cap on foreign students. Education has been one of our major exports, it’s an act of self harm to have cut one of our major exports because of concerns over immigration and housing which should be fixable issues.

Simply brilliant as always. Perhaps Albo can click his fingers and the housing crisis he created will disappear.

@Penfold
“Albo can click his fingers and the housing crisis he created will disappear”
And the, unsupported by facts, hyperbole continues, Penfold🤥.

While the current government hasn’t been able to do much about the housing crisis, it’s simply conservative lies to say it (the crisis) was created by the current Labor government. For, as financial journalist, Alan Kohler, explains in this 2023 article, the issue began in the 2000s, when the divide, in movement of wages and housing cost, began to increase disproportionately:
https://www.quarterlyessay.com.au/essay/2023/11/the-great-divide/extract

The truth is, Penfold, there there are many factors which have contributed to the housing crisis, and neither party has really done anything, of substance, to address it.

JS we know demand-supply economics aren’t really your thing, but when you drive up demand for housing through record immigration you create problems that didn’t previously exist.

Besides the fact that, that’s not what I said…so your comment is the usual dopey nonsense but please explain how Albo created the housing crisis?

We both know you won’t because you can’t, because facts don’t intrude into your world.

Misrepresenting the post pandemic surge as borders reopened as “record immigration” when net immigration has declined according to the ABS just another Penfoldian lie.

Oh seano, you do seem to be the master of the wild comment. 🫣 Here’s the ABS data on net migration. Net migration in the last four years has been the highest in the history of Australia, despite Albo’s promise to reduce it.

How do you get it so wrong so often, it’s quite a skill ?

https://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/people/population/overseas-migration/latest-release

@Penfold
We know reading comprehension is not really your thing, Penfold🤥, though I never actually expected to read that report from Kohler.

Nevertheless, at least try not to fabricate your own version of ‘facts’ – like the housing crisis did not exist before May 2022.

LMAO…Penfold did you actually look at the graphs…which clearly show the post pandemic surge followed by the steady decline. Embarrassing.

In proportion to population, Penfold?

That is right. You cannot handle proportions, exactly like “Stephen Saunders”.

“Stephen Saunders” sounds like a name Axon, not a proportion.

But hey, at least unlike seano you know that 1 + 1 – 1 = 1. That one (pardon the pun) continues to provide a great source of entertainment.

I’ve been following previous news reports on this and from the sound of it, the ANU only has enough money to fund certain courses. Also, considering the countless number of people I’ve met who studied at ANU only to never find work in the field that they studied…it makes you think ‘what’s the point in funding these subjects?’ It also echoes something else”with wealth for toil” is in our anthem but reports like this demonstrate otherwise.

Why do you think it unusual not to work directly in the field you have studied, let alone think that might be a problem or a disappointment?

Why does Cuts have a lower case u?

They are all free to change unis. It’s not like they are stuck at ANU

True, but having experienced struggling with administration of enrolment, that’s easier said than done. The alternative is to struggle slightly less with enrolment into a tech college such as CIT, learn a much needed trade such as Cybersecurity and/or IT, get a secure job and earn more money.

The poster on the left in the first photograph appears to confirm that what ANU arts students are taught isn’t going to help advance Australia in any way, shape or form.

“The major that I was promised when I started this degree is now crumbling, being wrenched away from me … if these cuts go ahead, I won’t be able to do the courses that I had planned to do,” said one protester.

Well as a taxpayer funding this, bring on the cuts.

Yeah, as an artistic and creative person who complains how society doesn’t value being artistic and creative….I actually agree. It’s a reality I don’t like but it’s true but when I consider how many talented artists get passed over for the repeated mundane sh*t, I lose sympathy.

Daily Digest

Want the best Canberra news delivered daily? Every day we package the most popular Region Canberra stories and send them straight to your inbox. Sign-up now for trusted local news that will never be behind a paywall.

By submitting your email address you are agreeing to Region Group's terms and conditions and privacy policy.