
Opposition calls on PM to take up Israel trip invite
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is being pressured to visit Israel as Australia strengthens its language against the Middle Eastern nation for blocking aid into Gaza.
Mr Albanese has been publicly invited by President Isaac Herzog after he strengthened his language to criticise Israel for a blockade of food and medical supplies into Gaza as it reinvigorates a military offensive.
The new opposition foreign affairs spokeswoman Michaelia Cash said Mr Albanese should take up the invitation and travel as soon as possible when there were no domestic issues like the NSW flood recovery.
"Australia and Israel have always had a very strong relationship, which has deteriorated significantly under the Albanese government since Hamas's terrorist attacks on Israel on 7 October 2023," Senator Cash told AAP.
"This is a good opportunity for the prime minister to reset the relationship."
The October 7 attack killed 1200 people and resulted in 250 hostages being taken, according to Israel's tallies.
Senator Cash is set to meet Israeli ambassador Amir Maimon in the next week.
Australia has joined a growing chorus of nations strengthening its rhetoric against the Jewish state as the death toll in Gaza eclipses 54,000, according to the local health authority.
More than two million people face starvation with a lack of basic supplies and the strip largely reduced to rubble following the nearly 20-month-long war.
Aid was stopped to pressure Hamas into releasing more hostages after a ceasefire broke down earlier this year.
The prime minister branded Israel's blockade as unacceptable and said its explanation for blocking aid was "completely untenable and without credibility".
Federal Labor president and former treasurer Wayne Swan said he was sure Mr Albanese would consider the invite.
"But you know, the behaviour of Israel at the moment is pretty outrageous when it comes to the blockage of aid into Gaza," he told Nine's Today Show on Friday.
"Now, of course, we've got additional settlements going into the West Bank, so the behaviour of the Israeli government is pretty provocative at the moment.
"But I'm sure the prime minister will do everything he can constructively to work with all those involved for a swift end to this conflict."
Canada, France and the UK last week warned of "further concrete action" if Israel doesn't halt its military campaign and lift aid restrictions.
A ceasefire deal brokered by the White House and signed off by Israel has renewed hope.
The proposal hasn't been fully detailed publicly and has been submitted to Hamas.
It comes ahead of a major international summit which will debate Palestinian statehood in New York in June.
Australia hasn't confirmed who will attend the summit as a representative.
Australia's representative to the United Nations James Larsen welcomed "the conference's ambition of a time-bound, irreversible pathway towards a two-state solution".
Israel has criticised any push for Palestinian statehood as rewarding Hamas' terrorism, a point that has been reiterated by some Jewish groups in Australia as well as the opposition.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


West Australian
an hour ago
- West Australian
'No animosity': Greens accept senator's defection
The federal Greens are taking the sudden defection of one of their senators to Labor on the chin, saying they have no animosity toward her. Standing alongside Prime Minister Anthony Albanese in Perth on Monday, West Australian senator Dorinda Cox announced she was quitting the Greens to sit with Labor in the upper house. The surprise move is a setback for the minor party, which has now lost its only Indigenous representative after losing three of its four lower house seats in the May federal election. Leader Larissa Waters said she received a phone call from Senator Cox an hour before her press conference with Mr Albanese. "We had a very calm and measured conversation about it, and I do genuinely wish her all the best," she told the ABC on Tuesday. "There's no animosity there. It's obviously disappointing for us to lose a Greens senator, but Dorinda has said her values lie there." But Senator Waters appeared to question this while pointing to Labor's decision to extend the North West Shelf gas project off the West Australian coast, which she said would impact ancient Indigenous rock art. "Those values are not consistent with Greens values," she said. "We've opposed that. But Senator Cox has made her decision that that party is a better fit for her, and we wish her nothing but the best." Asked about Senator Cox becoming the second Indigenous woman to quit the Greens - after now-independent senator Lydia Thorpe - Senator Waters said they had "very different reasons" for leaving. "The Greens remain entirely committed to strong advocacy on truth telling, on treaties, on justice, on healing, on reparations," she said. Senator Cox, a Yamatji-Noongar woman, joined the upper house in 2021 to fill a Greens vacancy and had been the party's Indigenous affairs spokesperson. In 2024, she suggested the Albanese government was "not interested" in closing the gap between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians. But on Monday, Senator Cox said she felt her values and priorities were better aligned with Labor than the Greens. "I've worked hard to make Australia fairer and much more reconciled, but recently, I've lost some confidence in the capacity for the Greens to assist me in being able to progress this," she told reporters. While she was not required to run in the May election after winning a six-year term in 2022, Senator Cox reportedly had concerns about her likely position on the WA Greens senate ticket going into the 2028 poll. Mr Albanese said Senator Cox, the first Indigenous woman to represent WA in the upper house, approached him about the switch. Senator Cox was accused of bullying Greens staffers in 2024, with as many as 20 employees leaving in three years and complaints made to parliament's workplace support service. Mr Albanese said the allegations had been examined. "They were all dealt with in Senator Cox's case and dealt with appropriately," he said. Labor will still require the support of either the Greens or the coalition in the Senate to pass legislation.


Perth Now
an hour ago
- Perth Now
'No animosity': Greens accept senator's defection
The federal Greens are taking the sudden defection of one of their senators to Labor on the chin, saying they have no animosity toward her. Standing alongside Prime Minister Anthony Albanese in Perth on Monday, West Australian senator Dorinda Cox announced she was quitting the Greens to sit with Labor in the upper house. The surprise move is a setback for the minor party, which has now lost its only Indigenous representative after losing three of its four lower house seats in the May federal election. Leader Larissa Waters said she received a phone call from Senator Cox an hour before her press conference with Mr Albanese. "We had a very calm and measured conversation about it, and I do genuinely wish her all the best," she told the ABC on Tuesday. "There's no animosity there. It's obviously disappointing for us to lose a Greens senator, but Dorinda has said her values lie there." But Senator Waters appeared to question this while pointing to Labor's decision to extend the North West Shelf gas project off the West Australian coast, which she said would impact ancient Indigenous rock art. "Those values are not consistent with Greens values," she said. "We've opposed that. But Senator Cox has made her decision that that party is a better fit for her, and we wish her nothing but the best." Asked about Senator Cox becoming the second Indigenous woman to quit the Greens - after now-independent senator Lydia Thorpe - Senator Waters said they had "very different reasons" for leaving. "The Greens remain entirely committed to strong advocacy on truth telling, on treaties, on justice, on healing, on reparations," she said. Senator Cox, a Yamatji-Noongar woman, joined the upper house in 2021 to fill a Greens vacancy and had been the party's Indigenous affairs spokesperson. In 2024, she suggested the Albanese government was "not interested" in closing the gap between Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians. But on Monday, Senator Cox said she felt her values and priorities were better aligned with Labor than the Greens. "I've worked hard to make Australia fairer and much more reconciled, but recently, I've lost some confidence in the capacity for the Greens to assist me in being able to progress this," she told reporters. While she was not required to run in the May election after winning a six-year term in 2022, Senator Cox reportedly had concerns about her likely position on the WA Greens senate ticket going into the 2028 poll. Mr Albanese said Senator Cox, the first Indigenous woman to represent WA in the upper house, approached him about the switch. Senator Cox was accused of bullying Greens staffers in 2024, with as many as 20 employees leaving in three years and complaints made to parliament's workplace support service. Mr Albanese said the allegations had been examined. "They were all dealt with in Senator Cox's case and dealt with appropriately," he said. Labor will still require the support of either the Greens or the coalition in the Senate to pass legislation.


Canberra Times
an hour ago
- Canberra Times
More deaths near Gaza food distribution centre: Hamas
The Israeli military said it fired warning shots on Monday towards "several suspects who advanced toward the troops and posed a threat to them", around a kilometre away from the aid distribution site at a time when it was closed. The army denied it was preventing people from reaching the site.