logo
Prime Minister says he remains hopeful of Russia, Ukraine ceasefire

Prime Minister says he remains hopeful of Russia, Ukraine ceasefire

The Age19 hours ago
'We want to see the sovereignty of Ukraine protected,' he said.
'It is a good thing that President Trump is an advocate for peace; what we want to see is that the sovereignty of Ukraine be protected and that the illegal and immoral invasion conducted by Mr Putin and Russia are not rewarded.
'It's important as well now for international rule of law. It's also important because of the precedent that Russia's invasion sets of a powerful nation invading a much smaller nation and engaging in the brutality - which we have seen at a great cost to the Ukrainian people, but also at a great cost to Russian soldiers who have lost their lives.'
Albanese made the comments at a resources, science and technology showcase in Perth on Sunday, which was hosted by Seven West Media ahead of a planned economic roundtable next week.
He said Western Australia is at the centre of the federal government's plans to transition to renewable energy, with the showcase is expected to attract about 20,000 people to highlight WA's resources, science, and technology industries.
Loading
'We want to see a more productive, a more vibrant, a more dynamic Australian economy,' Albanese said.
'WA is at the centre of that.'
Albanese pointed out it was his 36th visit to the state since he became Prime Minister.
'We understand that the jobs and the economic activity that is created here in the west is so important,' he said.
'What we're also seeing with this showcase is the way the industries are being transformed by new technology, by artificial intelligence - but at the front and centre of it all is of course our labour force.'
The showcase comes ahead of the federal government's roundtable next week, which will advocates and experts from around the country to discuss ways to raise the country's productivity levels.
'What will happen over the next three days of the forum is that people will put forward ideas; they'll feed into government decision-making.
'There'll be some measures that can be adopted immediately if the government adopts it, and there'll be some that feed into budget processes, but there'll be some about the long-term challenges in the global economy [and] the impact in Australia.'
Albanese said he intended to meet with industry leaders - including Seven West Media's chief and WesTrac and Coates Hire owner Kerry Stokes.
When asked how he squared supporting the oil and gas industry with the government's net-zero policy, he said he was aiming for a 'sensible' transition.
'That is precisely what industry here and the resources sector here are committing too as well - we're working with industry on that transition because what that means is opportunities for jobs and growth here in Western Australia by contributing to our national economy.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Advisors inside the Trump-Putin Alaska meeting reveal 'crux of the deal' being negotiated
Advisors inside the Trump-Putin Alaska meeting reveal 'crux of the deal' being negotiated

ABC News

timean hour ago

  • ABC News

Advisors inside the Trump-Putin Alaska meeting reveal 'crux of the deal' being negotiated

Vladimir Putin and his Russian delegation may have been welcomed on United States soil, but sanctions meant that when it came time to pay for the refuelling of their aircraft, they offered to pay in cash. Speaking about the summit and the current state of negotiations, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio defended Donald Trump's decision to not impose further sanctions on Russia despite Mr Putin not agreeing to a ceasefire. "Every single sanction that was in place on the day he took over remains and the impact of all those sanctions remains," Mr Rubio told NBC. "When the Russians landed in Alaska … they had to offer to pay in cash to refuel their airplanes because they can't use our banking system. "They face consequences every single day, but the bottom line is that has not altered the direction of this war. That doesn't mean those sanctions were inappropriate, it means it hasn't altered the outcome of it." Mr Putin and his team were on the ground in Alaska for about five hours on Friday, and departed shortly after a joint press conference between the Russian president and Mr Trump. The US president said "no deal" was done, but yesterday it was revealed that there is an offer from Russia on the table and some reporting suggested Mr Trump was leaning on Ukraine to consider it. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy will be in Washington on Monday, local time, to have his own meeting with Mr Trump. Mr Zelenskyy and European leaders have pressed the United States to consider further sanctions on Russia, but today Mr Rubio said that was not the current strategy. "Those options remain to the president. The minute he takes those steps, all talks stop. The minute we take those steps, there is no-one left in the world to go talk to the Russians and try and get them to the table to reach a peace agreement," he said. "We may very well end up in that place. I hope not because that means that peace talks failed." Speaking to the Sunday morning political programs in the United States, Mr Rubio and special envoy Steve Witkoff were repeatedly asked what concessions Russia might be willing to make without the threat of new sanctions. Both men were beside Mr Trump as he met with Mr Putin on Friday as part of the three-on-three discussion. And today, both suggested there would have to be compromise on both sides. "We all the know the elements of such a deal: there has to be talk about what the territories are going to look like … there has to be talk about Ukraine's legitimate desire for security in the long term, to make sure they don't get invaded again, there has to be talk about how Ukraine is rebuilt," Mr Rubio told NBC. "If there is going to be a deal, each side is going to have to give up on something." The current state of negotiations suggest the most significant area of compromise right now is around security guarantees, and how Ukraine deters Russia after any peace agreement is signed. Mr Witkoff, who has also travelled to Moscow several times to discuss its war in Ukraine, said it was now possible that the US could provide a NATO-like guarantee for Ukraine. "We were able to win the following concession, that the United States could offer Article 5-like protection … which was the first time we had ever heard the Russians agree to that," Mr Witkoff told CNN. Mr Witkoff was referring to Article 5 of the North Atlantic Treaty, which regards any attack against one of its 32 members as an attack on all. He suggested the US would play that role instead and work as a security guarantee offered to Ukraine in lieu of NATO membership, which Mr Putin has ruled out. He said the American delegation in Alaska did not think they "were anywhere close" to achieving that in the meeting with Russia. Mr Witkoff characterised it as a "concession". He said as well as the NATO-like guarantee, Russia also agreed to "legislative enshrinement in the Russian Federation" to not invade Ukraine again or other European nations. It is worth noting that in 2022, eight months after Russia launched its invasion, its parliament rubber-stamped legislation to designate four regions of Ukraine as Russia under its constitution. In that sense, it does not consider those regions a different nation. In a meeting of European leaders and Mr Zelenskyy on Sunday, local time, security guarantees were discussed, with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen saying, "Ukraine must become a steel porcupine, indigestible for potential invaders." Giving further insight into the status of the negotiations with Russia, Mr Witkoff said the "crux of the deal" at this point, was where territory lines could be drawn. There is no appetite from Ukraine for its borders to be redrawn and its territory to be ceded to Russia, but Mr Witkoff said this would be a focus of the discussions in the White House tomorrow. He gave some insight into where that conversation may begin. "The fundamental issue, which is some sort of land swap, which is obviously ultimately in the control of the Ukrainians, that could not have been discussed at that meeting. We intend to discuss it on Monday," he said. There has been reporting in the United States that Mr Trump is encouraging Mr Zelenskyy to strike a deal with Russia that would see his nation lose some, if not all, of the Donbass. Mr Witkoff said that was "the crux of the deal". "There are five regions, [that have] always in our view has been the crux of the deal. Those five regions the Russians have previously said they wanted it at the administrative lines. The administrative lines are the actual legal boundary lines as compared to the contact lines," he said. "The Russians made some concessions at the table with regard to all five of those regions. "There is an important discussion to be had with regard to Donetsk and what would happen there and that discussion is going to specifically be detailed on Monday [local time] when president Zelenskyy arrives with his delegation and other European leaders." It is likely the regions he is referring to are Donetsk, Luhansk, Kherson, Zaporizhzhia and Crimea. After his meeting with European leaders on Sunday, local time, Mr Zelenskyy said: "Everyone agrees that the borders of states should not be changed by force." "Everyone supports that key issues should be resolved with the participation of Ukraine in a trilateral format: Ukraine, the United States, the Russian leader." Mr Witkoff said it was his view that the negotiations would get to a point where the three leaders, Mr Trump, Mr Zelenskyy and Mr Putin could meet. There has been no indication from Mr Putin that he has changed his position on that. ABC

Nationals MP Barnaby Joyce warns AI could replace work-from-home jobs, urges caution for remote workers
Nationals MP Barnaby Joyce warns AI could replace work-from-home jobs, urges caution for remote workers

West Australian

timean hour ago

  • West Australian

Nationals MP Barnaby Joyce warns AI could replace work-from-home jobs, urges caution for remote workers

Australia's workplace ombudsman will be asked to support the right to work from home, to stop it from being used by employers to bargain away other rights, amid warnings AI could replace jobs that can be done remotely. The Australian Services Union says it will lodge a submission with the Fair Work Commission to support working from home, where it's possible to do so. 'Working from home is now a permanent feature of the modern Australian workplace, and our submission will make it clear that the location of work does not diminish its value,' union secretary Emeline Gaske said on Monday. Workers have embraced the benefits but are concerned about employers using it as an excuse to cut pay and conditions. 'Our submission will demonstrate the productivity benefits of a remote workforce and will argue that we have to provide the protections that those workers are entitled to,' Ms Gaske said. 'Taking away the right to work from home would be a race to the bottom that will hurt hundreds of thousands of workers, the majority of whom are women across our country, and we will fight it every step of the way,' she said. The union's submission is backed by a survey of 600 workers, more than two-thirds of them women - 98 per cent of whom consider being able to work from home as 'extremely' or 'very important'. But federal Nationals MP Barnaby Joyce said workers needed to be careful because jobs that can be done from home could be automated by artificial intelligence tools. 'If your job is a keyboard, yourself and a computer, it's not a myth, AI is coming,' he told Seven's Sunrise program. 'I'd be doing everything in your power to try and keep your jobs because if people can prove they don't need to come to the office then the office can prove that they can be replaced by AI.' Mr Joyce pointed to trades work, such and electricians and plumbers. 'AI won't be able to turn itself into a plumber or itself into an electrician or a chippy, so trades are a place where you can sustain a good level of employment,' he added. 'It ... replaces people but it doesn't have hands and it doesn't have feet - think about it.' Social Services Minister Tanya Plibersek said repetitive jobs were most under threat from AI. 'What we need to do is make sure that there are good jobs available for Australians in new and emerging industries as well,' she said. 'We've got real capacity to develop some of those AI tools right here. The rise of working from home emerged during the COVID-19 pandemic and has remained part of the workforce. The use and application of AI is likely to be a hot topic at the federal government's productivity roundtable beginning in Canberra on Tuesday.

Joyce warns remote work jobs at risk from AI automation
Joyce warns remote work jobs at risk from AI automation

Perth Now

timean hour ago

  • Perth Now

Joyce warns remote work jobs at risk from AI automation

Australia's workplace ombudsman will be asked to support the right to work from home, to stop it from being used by employers to bargain away other rights, amid warnings AI could replace jobs that can be done remotely. The Australian Services Union says it will lodge a submission with the Fair Work Commission to support working from home, where it's possible to do so. 'Working from home is now a permanent feature of the modern Australian workplace, and our submission will make it clear that the location of work does not diminish its value,' union secretary Emeline Gaske said on Monday. Workers have embraced the benefits but are concerned about employers using it as an excuse to cut pay and conditions. 'Our submission will demonstrate the productivity benefits of a remote workforce and will argue that we have to provide the protections that those workers are entitled to,' Ms Gaske said. 'Taking away the right to work from home would be a race to the bottom that will hurt hundreds of thousands of workers, the majority of whom are women across our country, and we will fight it every step of the way,' she said. The union's submission is backed by a survey of 600 workers, more than two-thirds of them women - 98 per cent of whom consider being able to work from home as 'extremely' or 'very important'. But federal Nationals MP Barnaby Joyce said workers needed to be careful because jobs that can be done from home could be automated by artificial intelligence tools. 'If your job is a keyboard, yourself and a computer, it's not a myth, AI is coming,' he told Seven's Sunrise program. 'I'd be doing everything in your power to try and keep your jobs because if people can prove they don't need to come to the office then the office can prove that they can be replaced by AI.' Mr Joyce pointed to trades work, such and electricians and plumbers. 'AI won't be able to turn itself into a plumber or itself into an electrician or a chippy, so trades are a place where you can sustain a good level of employment,' he added. 'It ... replaces people but it doesn't have hands and it doesn't have feet - think about it.' Social Services Minister Tanya Plibersek said repetitive jobs were most under threat from AI. 'What we need to do is make sure that there are good jobs available for Australians in new and emerging industries as well,' she said. 'We've got real capacity to develop some of those AI tools right here. The rise of working from home emerged during the COVID-19 pandemic and has remained part of the workforce. The use and application of AI is likely to be a hot topic at the federal government's productivity roundtable beginning in Canberra on Tuesday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store