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'Anti-farming' Labor lambasted after report emerges Albanese government is reviewing US beef ban for tariff negotiations

'Anti-farming' Labor lambasted after report emerges Albanese government is reviewing US beef ban for tariff negotiations

Sky News AU17 hours ago

Labor has been attacked as "one of the most anti-farming governments" and urged not to use Australia's $11.3b beef export industry as a 'pawn' or to strike a 'compromised deal' with the United States to limit the ramifications of Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs.
Government officials reportedly told The Sydney Morning Herald that Australia could alter its biosecurity laws to allow US beef exports without risks to local industry, in a move to appease Trump as he wages his trade war.
Australia banned US beef in 2003 after a mad cow disease outbreak before undoing this in 2019 when the outbreak subsided.
Cattle raised in Mexico and Canada but slaughtered in the US is still banned, however, this could be changed according to the report.
Nationals Senate Leader Bridget McKenzie told Sky News on Friday that the beef industry needs to be protected.
'We need to be making decisions about importing beef based on science and the biosecurity risk posed by those imports, not in some sort of compromised deal-or-no-deal trade-off with the United States,' Ms McKenzie told First Edition.
'I think the big concern for the government here, in the reports today in the Nine papers, is that it seems this is again one of the most anti-farming governments if these reports are true.
'We've got the live sheep trade cancelled, we've got the super tax on farmers, we've got the methane pledge and now potentially (Labor is) using our beef industry and our 63,000 beef farmers as a pawn in some sort of trade deal instead of basing these decisions on science.'
Independent MP Zali Steggall, who appeared alongside Ms McKenzie, backed the Nationals Senator's concerns and questioned the government's tactics in fighting the trade war.
'It's very concerning if these reports are true because it does mean the Albanese government is picking and choosing which industries it's going to fight for and protect,' she said.
'I do agree with Bridget, it would be incredibly concerning for the Albanese government to be prepared to put on the table, as part of negotiations, changing the rules we have in relation to the import of beef.
'The government should be standing up for Australian industry.'
Australia exports more than $4b of beef to the US annually, making it the largest market for Aussie beef exports behind China.
After Trump revealed his sweeping tariffs and invited impacted nations to negotiate, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese vowed to protect the nation's biosecurity laws, Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme and news publishers against tech giants.
'We will not weaken the measures that protect our farmers and producers from the risks of disease or contamination,' he said in a statement.
However, this new report suggests the Albanese government could have found a way to ensure the Australian beef industry's security while allowing US beef in.
Australia faces 50 per cent tariffs on steel and aluminium alongside a broad 10 per cent levy on all goods, which is still paused by the Trump Administration.
Mr Albanese is expected to have a meeting with Trump either on the sidelines of the G7 meeting in Canada or in the US later in June where the Prime Minister will make Australia's case for tariff exemptions.
This could include changes to beef import rules.
When Trump revealed his 'Liberation Day' tariffs, he took a swipe at Australian restrictions on US beef.
'Australia bans - and they're wonderful people and wonderful everything - but they ban American beef,' the US President said in April.
'Yet we imported US$3b of Australian beef from them just last year alone. They won't take any of our beef.
"They don't want it because they don't want it to affect their farmers and you know, I don't blame them but they're doing the same thing right now."

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