Education
Bishop alleges 'coercive threats', 'overreach' by university regulator in resignation letter
Key Points
Julie Bishop alleges 'coercive threats' and 'overreach' by university regulator in ANU resignation letter Wed 10 Jun 2026 at 4:22pm In short: Former ANU chancellor Julie Bishop's resignation letter was yesterday tabled in parliament. Ms Bishop resigned in May and makes allegations against the education regulator.
Julie Bishop alleges 'coercive threats' and 'overreach' by university regulator in ANU resignation letter
Wed 10 Jun 2026 at 4:22pm
In short:
Former ANU chancellor Julie Bishop's resignation letter was yesterday tabled in parliament.
Ms Bishop resigned in May and makes allegations against the education regulator.
The university's governance attracted sustained criticism as a now-abandoned savings program was pursued.
Former chancellor of the Australian National University (ANU) Julie Bishop said actions by the university regulator "grievously constrained" her ability to do her role, in a withering resignation letter that has now been tabled in federal parliament.
In her resignation letter to the ANU, which was tabled in parliament yesterday, Ms Bishop alleged the Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency's (TEQSA) "continued and increasingly contemptuous intervention in [ANU] Council matters" led to her leaving ahead of her second-term finishing date at the end of the year.
The letter mirrors reasons that Ms Bishop had already put forward when she resigned as chancellor from the scandal-plagued institution in May.
Among several forceful allegations in the letter — many of which were refuted by TEQSA officials in a Senate estimates hearing last week — was that TEQSA "moved to substantially take over the governance of the university".
Ms Bishop continued that she perceived "coercive threats" about proposed new conditions of registration, and that the combined result would be to "strip the university of independence and autonomy".
'Persistent, unreasonable' requests: Ms Bishop
In her letter, Ms Bishop also stated that "the extent and manner of TEQSA's interventions have had a seriously destabilising and fracturing effect on council and the broader university community".
Ms Bishop also heavily criticised what she saw as "persistent, unreasonable and arguably vexatious requests for information" from the regulator.
"At the time of my appointment on January 1, 2020, engagement with TEQSA was, as is typical across the sector, limited. In fact, I only received one letter in the first four years of my tenure as chancellor," she said.
"Since late 2024 and through the early part of 2025, coinciding with council's program to return to operational and financial sustainability by reduction of the university's operating costs and organisational restructure, the requests from TEQSA have increased markedly, to almost 60 separate interactions to date requiring my personal input."
There has been repeated criticism of the university's governance and control over the past 18 months, with a significant amount directed at Ms Bishop and former vice-chancellor Genevieve Bell.
It has led to several recent resignations among the university top brass, including Ms Bishop, Professor Bell and several appointed members of the ANU Council.
Bishop (ORG)
Julie Bishop (PERSON)
ANU (ORG)
Julie Bishop's (PERSON)
Ms Bishop (PERSON)
the Australian National University (ORG)
the Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency's (ORG)
TEQSA (ORG)
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the university of independence (ORG)
council (ORG)
Genevieve Bell (PERSON)
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the ANU Council (ORG)