Why Trump's a term-long problem for the Coalition
On the other hand, Labor merely had to strike a pose of calm defiance in the face of Trump's assault on Australia's interests. Anthony Albanese's government appeared to be stable, sane and safe. It reaped a major dividend at the exact moment that voters sought security.
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Yet this is not the end of the era of Australia v Trump. To rework the Bunnings slogan, higher tariffs are just the beginning.
Trump's administration already plans to assail important Australian interests. Starting with the cherished Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme. America's big pharma firms complain that it's a restraint on their ability to charge Australians full freight for their drugs. Which is the whole point.
And Trump plans to fight Australia on behalf of Elon Musk's X and the other big US 'social' media and tech corporations. Wherever Australia tries to exert any sovereignty over local internet content – to protect kids, for instance – Trump, Musk & Co. will demand that American profits prevail.
Then there are Australia's biosecurity laws. The laws quarantine Australia's beef, pork, apple and pear sectors from imported disease, but their US competitors demand entry, claiming the biosecurity laws are trade protectionism by another name. Trump's America will try to break all of this and more.
A problem for the Albanese government to manage diplomatically? Yes. But Trump's hostility is also a gift that will keep giving for Albanese politically. All he need do is maintain his calm defiance in the face of Trump's bellicosity and bluster. And Albanese will be a local hero.
And what will the Coalition be doing? The Liberal Party will try to distance itself from Trump. Dutton is gone now, but it is vulnerable nonetheless. Why? Because of a little detail – the Gina Rinehart faction, the local franchise of Trump's MAGA, and its love of fossil fuels, nuclear reactors and climate denialism.
The Rinehart faction is mostly concentrated in the Nationals. But Jacinta Nampijinpa Price is one of the staunchest Rinehart reactionaries. She has moved from the Nationals party room to sit with the Liberals.
How is this a problem for the Liberals? Because the Liberals, if they hope to continue as the alternative party of government, need to dump the climate wars. But the Nationals and Price don't want to dump the climate wars. They want to escalate the conflict.
At her first press conference after her election as the new Liberal leader, Sussan Ley was asked: 'Moderates have been damning about a lack of climate ambition. Can you really afford another climate war to start off your tenure?'
Ley answered: 'There isn't going to be a climate war [within the Coalition]. There is going to be sound, sensible consultation.' She's been careful to say that all policy is up for review.
Specifically, she's been non-committal on the two frontline Coalition climate policies – the plan to build seven taxpayer-funded nuclear reactors, and the commitment to net zero carbon emissions by 2050. But the Gina Rinehart faction is very committed, regardless of what Ley thinks. Committed to forging ahead with the nuclear reactors. And committed to dumping the net zero commitment.
The climate war inside the Coalition is already afoot. It was the Coalition under Tony Abbott and Barnaby Joyce that started the climate wars as a way to wreck Labor. And, for a while, it worked. But now the climate war is a civil war within the Coalition. So the victim of the war will be the Coalition.
Barnaby Joyce was the Nationals' leader who struck the Coalition deal with Scott Morrison to support net zero. But on Friday, Joyce, recovering from cancer surgery, tells me: 'It's obvious in the sobriety of the post-election analysis, it's incontestable in my view – we can't go forward with net zero. There is no love out there for net zero.'
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He cites his electorate of New England. While there was an overall swing towards him of 2 per cent, he enjoyed a swing in his favour of 15 per cent in part of the electorate, an area of the town of Muswellbrook that previously had been in a Labor-held seat but recently was included in his electorate as a result of redistribution.
'In the past, people didn't know what net zero was, but they went along with it because it sounded harmless. But now they realise it does mean something – and it hurts. We have to have a reality check,' Joyce says.
Other Nationals – including Senator Matt Canavan and MP for the seat of Flynn in Queensland Colin Boyce – want to dump net zero. These Nats also hope to retain the nuclear energy policy they took to the election.
The Nats leader, David Littleproud, publicly has been evasive on these policies as he entered coalition negotiations for the new parliament with Ley.
The Nationals' leader in the Senate, Bridget McKenzie, hasn't been evasive at all. She told my colleague Paul Sakkal this week that it would be 'against the national interest' to drop nuclear power 'if we are serious about staying an industrial economy and reducing emissions'.
She implied that it could be a dealbreaker for the Coalition: 'Obviously, our country is best served by a strong Nationals-and-Liberals Coalition government, but the establishment of a coalition between the Liberal and National parties is never a foregone conclusion.' And the net zero policy was up for review because regional Australia was 'absolutely up in arms about [Labor] carpeting their farmland, their communities with transmission lines and solar panels and wind farms'.
Yet the Liberals know that if they want to have any chance of forming government again, they need to appeal to the cities and to voters under the age of 60. Without a credible climate policy, they can't do either.
The Coalition won't break entirely because the Liberals and Nationals are merged into one – the Liberal National Party – in their stronghold state of Queensland. Besides, the Nats want to be in a coalition so they keep their positions as shadow ministers, and the salary allowances that go with them. But it'll look more like a sullen cohabitation than a coalition.
And this civil war is not a clear-cut Nats v Libs conflict. There are Liberals, notably Jacinta Nampijinpa Price, who agree with the idea of dumping net zero and keeping the nuclear policy. This roiling internal argument will probably dog the Coalition all the way to the next election.
And every time it surfaces, it will remind the electorate that the Coalition simply isn't credible on energy and climate policy. And that it shares its climate-denying, fossil-fuel-loving recidivism with Gina Rinehart and Donald Trump.
The state of the Coalition today is reminiscent of philosopher Antonio Gramsci's famous line: 'The old is dying and the new cannot be born.'
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West Australian
42 minutes ago
- West Australian
Trade talks rest on Anthony Albanese's meeting with Donald Trump in Canada
Australia's case for exemptions or relief from American tariffs will rest on Anthony Albanese's meeting next week with US President Donald Trump. Trade Minister Don Farrell had two conversations with US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer on the sidelines of OECD and World Trade Organisation meetings in Paris last week to press Australia's case, but says it's clear the leaders need to make the final call. Ministers and officials at all levels have consistently been arguing the US shouldn't impose tariffs on Australia because it has a trade surplus here, selling more to Australians than it buys each year. The Trump administration has so far imposed hefty tariffs on steel and aluminium imports, which have just risen to 50 per cent, and also slugged Australia with a 10 per cent so-called reciprocal tariff despite Australia not having tariffs on any US goods. Mr Albanese and Senator Farrell have repeatedly said the imposts are not the actions of a friend. Nevertheless, Senator Farrell said he'd had a 'friendly discussion' with Mr Greer but the final decision would be made at a higher level. 'He certainly made it clear that these are ultimately decisions that the President of the United States will make,' the minister told Sky News on Sunday. 'But I certainly haven't given up on the prospect of getting these tariffs removed, and every opportunity I get, I'll continue to pursue that argument with the United States.' Mr Albanese has flagged he expects to meet Mr Trump for the first time on the sidelines of the G7 meeting in Canada next weekend. The Government is in the final stages of a review of the rules around American beef imports, with Trump administration figures repeatedly raising Australia's 'ban' on US meat as one of their trade gripes. Australia has biosecurity restrictions on the import of Canadian and Mexican beef that is slaughtered in the US and Mr Albanese has insisted his Government will not risk the safety of local agriculture by relaxing rules. The UK has secured exemptions from some of the US tariffs by striking a new deal that in part allows greater market access for American beef. Shadow finance minister James Paterson pointed to the UK deal as a measure of the success of Mr Albanese's imminent meeting with Mr Trump. '(UK Prime Minister) Keir Starmer has now achieved a partial exemption from the steel and aluminium tariffs, and Australia is at least as good an ally of the United States as the United Kingdom is and so there's no reason why the Prime Minister shouldn't at least be able to secure that exemption,' Senator Paterson told ABC's Insiders. 'I'm just saying that Keir Starmer proves that it is possible to get an exemption. It is not an impossible task.' Senator Farrell said the main topic of discussions with counterparts at the WTO and OECD was ensuring other countries didn't increase their protectionism in the face of the US moves. He pointed out Australia hadn't his China with counter-imposts when it imposed trade barriers on goods such as wine, barley and lobster, and nor had it retaliate against the US. 'I think there's a move around the world to push the case for less protectionism and more free and fair trade,' he said. 'I'm hopeful that those countries around the world who do believe in free and fair trade can reach agreement to extend free trade agreements across the globe so that, irrespective of what the Americans might choose to do, we have a greater diversity of trading partners.'

9 News
an hour ago
- 9 News
The Washington power couple straddling the Trump-Musk feud
Your web browser is no longer supported. To improve your experience update it here They're the Washington couple at the centre of power in the Trump administration. They're also straddling opposing sides of an explosive breakup between US President Donald Trump and billionaire Elon Musk . CNN reported last week that Katie Miller, the wife of Stephen Miller, Trump's deputy chief of staff, would be departing her senior role at the White House as a top spokesperson and adviser for Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency. She was on her way to work for Musk as he went back to running his companies, helping the tech titan manage and arrange interviews unrelated to his time in government. Washington power couple - Katie Miller and her husband Stephen Miller. (Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc/Getty/CNN) But days later, amid the smoldering ruin of Musk and Trump's epic meltdown on Thursday over social media, that job suddenly took on a whole new layer. Among the attacks both men lobbed at each other was Musk endorsing the possibility of impeaching Trump and installing Vice President JD Vance in his place. Trump, in turn, raised the possibility of terminating federal contracts for Musk's companies. The episode has left the Millers on conflicting sides of the biggest breakup of Trump's second term, spawning gossip among White House aides and rounds of speculation about how the fallout could impact the political fortunes of one of the most powerful couples in Trump's Washington, where loyalty reigns. Elon Musk, centre, and Stephen Miller, right, during a meeting in the Oval Office in February. (Francis Chung/Politico/Bloomberg/Getty/CNN) "Everyone is talking about it," a former Trump staffer told CNN. Katie Miller was in Texas last week for the series of interviews Musk held with space and technology journalists as SpaceX's Starship had its ninth test flight. It was there that Musk first delicately expressed he was "disappointed" in the Republican's domestic policy bill in an interview with CBS News. Her X account is now a steady stream of laudatory posts about Musk and his companies, with a banner photo of a SpaceX rocket launching into space and a biography that says, "wife of @stephenm." Her only social media post on Friday was a reply with laughing emojis to an altered photo of her husband as a Home Depot employee attached to a post about immigration raids on the chain's stores. Elon Musk and his son X Æ accompanied by Katie Miller at the US Capitol Building in May. (via CNN) One former colleague told CNN that she will ultimately need to make a choice. "She has a choice between Elon and Trump, but it can't be both," the administration official said. Musk unfollowed Stephen Miller on X on Thursday, although both Millers continued following Musk on the platform into Friday. There are divided views on how the situation will impact Stephen Miller's ascendance. Stephen Miller was a part of Trump's first administration. (AP) Among Trump's closest advisers, many believe he is surpassed in power only by Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, fueling speculation among some over whether he could take over should Wiles decide to move on. "This whole thing will definitely make that more complicated," one senior White House official told CNN. "Katie being paid by Elon is not good for Stephen." Another senior White House official strongly pushed back on the idea that this episode with Musk would impact Miller in any way with the President. "Next to Susie, Trump trusts and relies on Stephen the most," the official said, adding that the President and top brass were understanding that his wife working for Musk had nothing to do with Stephen or the current state of events. Katie Miller declined to comment for this story. 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"My family and colleagues told me that when I have kids I'll think about the separations differently. But I don't think so … DHS sent me to the border to see the separations for myself – to try to make me more compassionate – but it didn't work," Miller told NBC News journalist Jacob Soboroff in an interview for his book, "Separated." The pair married at Trump's Washington, DC, hotel in February 2020. Trump attended the wedding. In the four years after Trump left office, both set their sights on a Trump return to the White House. Stephen Miller launched a conservative nonprofit group, America First Legal Foundation, that served in part as a prelude to the policy of Trump's second term. Katie Miller headed to the private sector, where she consulted a number of major companies, including Apple. They were also raising three young children. 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Sky News AU
2 hours ago
- Sky News AU
Shadow industrial relations minister Tim Wilson backs wage rise but blasts Labor for ‘milking' small business
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