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‘Haven't given up': Farrell seeks tariff breakthrough

‘Haven't given up': Farrell seeks tariff breakthrough

Trade minister Don Farrell remains confident tariffs imposed by the US will be removed, ahead of a likely meeting between Anthony Albanese and Donald Trump.
The two leaders could meet on the sidelines of the G7 summit in Canada next week, with the economic measures imposed by the US president around the world set to dominate discussions.
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Abbie Chatfield addresses federal election controversy and Anthony Albanese posts
Abbie Chatfield addresses federal election controversy and Anthony Albanese posts

Daily Telegraph

time34 minutes ago

  • Daily Telegraph

Abbie Chatfield addresses federal election controversy and Anthony Albanese posts

Don't miss out on the headlines from Celebrity Life. Followed categories will be added to My News. Abbie Chatfield has addressed the controversies that erupted following her decision to speak out ahead of this year's federal election — and how she is 'often a scapegoat' to the 'demeaning' and 'deeply damaging' effects of being targeted by fellow feminists and far-right trolls. Chatfield used her platform to speak out about politics and the recent federal election in May. An Australian Electoral Commission inquiry was raised after collaborative social media posts between Chatfield and Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, as well as former Greens leader Adam Bandt, were queried by Liberal Senator Jane Hume. The AEC ultimately concluded that Chatfield's posts did not require authorisation under electoral law. Listen to the full interview with Abbie Chatfield on Something To Talk About: Speaking to the Stellar podcast, Something To Talk About, Chatfield said: 'The AEC stuff was a whole other level of, I believe, discrediting smaller voices, but also discrediting outspoken young women'. Picture: Steven Chee for Stellar Abbie Chatfield is on the cover of today's Stellar. Picture: Steven Chee for Stellar 'It seems that when women do more than one thing, they're deemed as inept at all the things they do,' Chatfield told Something To Talk About, in a new episode released today. 'But when men do more than one thing it's like, wow, he's a footy player and he can read an autocue. 'The AEC thing made me feel really targeted. I feel I'm often a scapegoat because of how the media portrays me as being the spokesperson on things, and they go, 'Oh, she's talking again…'' Chatfield also addressed recent criticisms lobbed at her by prominent writer and feminist Clementine Ford, who accused her of 'profiting from the performance of being politically engaged' following an interview that Chatfield conducted with Albanese on her podcast. Abbie Chatfield has addressed her recent controversies in a new interview with Stellar. Picture: NCA NewsWire / David Clark 'I feel like I'm in the middle of stories like that all the time. So it's kind of, unfortunately, my norm,' Chatfield told Something To Talk About. 'But it's never enjoyable or pleasant. This idea that because I'm not doing things perfectly, that I'm an idiotic narcissist, I don't know anything, I'm brain dead, I'm a deeply basic thinker – they're just insults. 'It's not actually critiquing my work. For more from Abbie Chatfield, listen to the full interview on Something To Talk About: 'It was really hurtful because then after that, the right-wing comments came in saying, 'Nothing better than a cat fight. Two feminists fighting. You can't even agree with each other!' 'And it's very demeaning. And that isn't Clementine's fault, but it is something that she should have considered, and that I have considered when I haven't called her out for things that I would say are deeply damaging.' In the Stellar cover story and podcast episode released today, Chatfield also opens up about her personal life and relationship with boyfriend Adam Hyde, and why she is in a better place when it comes to her life outside of work She issues a warning to women, saying they 'shouldn't date Trump supporters'. Listen to the full interview with Abbie Chatfield on Something To Talk About now, and watch it here. See the cover shoot with Abbie Chatfield in today's Stellar via The Sunday Telegraph (NSW), Sunday Herald Sun (VIC), The Sunday Mail (QLD) and Sunday Mail (SA). For more from Stellar, click here. Originally published as 'Beyond sick of it': Abbie Chatfield fires back at critics

Trade Minister optimistic US tariffs will be removed
Trade Minister optimistic US tariffs will be removed

SBS Australia

time2 hours ago

  • SBS Australia

Trade Minister optimistic US tariffs will be removed

Trade Minister Don Farrell "optimistic" in US trade negotiations Pride Month protests held around the world Coco Gauff wins the French Open Listen to Australian and world news, and follow trending topics with SBS News Podcasts . Australian Trade Minister Don Farrell says he is confident the United States will remove tariffs on Australian imports. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is expected to meet with American President Donald Trump in Canada next week, on the sidelines of the G-7 summit. Mr Farrell told Sky News he is pursuing every opportunity to argue for Australia's exclusion from the tariffs the U-S has imposed on most countries. He says he has told his American counterpart Jamieson Greer that tariffs on Australia are unjustified, due to a trade surplus with the United States. "We want all of the tariffs removed, not just some of them. We want all of them removed. And I made it clear to USTR Greer that we will continue to press for the removal of all of those tariffs." Protests are set to continue around Australia this afternoon, over the death in custody of Kumanjayi White. They've embarked on a National Week of Action, demanding justice for the 24-year-old Yuendumu man, who had an intellectual disability. Police allege he was shoplifting from an Alice Springs supermarket on May 27 and had assaulted a security guard, when plain clothes detectives forcibly restrained him, and he died. Mr White's family are calling for the two police officers involved, to be stood down during the criminal investigation of the matter. Northern Territory police have confirmed the detectives have not been stood down. Rallies have been held in recent days across capital cities, with more scheduled today. A candlelight vigil in memory of slain teenager Phoebe Bishop will go ahead after police discovered human remains in "unforgiving" bushland southwest of Bundaberg. Forensic testing is being undertaken to formally identify the remains, which Detective Inspector Craig Mansfield says were not buried but declined to offer specifics. "I don't want to go into the specifics of what we've seen there at the scene just out of respect for Phoebe's family we will conduct our examinations of course with a view of trying to determine a cause of death." The discovery came just hours after Phoebe's accused housemates, 34-year-old James Wood and 33-year-old Tanika Bromley, were arrested and remanded in custody. Both have been charged with murder and interfering with a corpse. The community will hold a candlelight vigil early evening on Sunday, with locals asked to wear bright colours and butterflies. LGBTIQ+ people from around the world have marched through the streets of Washington DC, in a show of defiance to President Donald Trump for rolling back the community's rights. The Republican president has issued executive orders limiting transgender rights, banning transgender people from serving in the armed forces, and rescinding anti-discrimination policies for LGBTIQ+ people. Rallies have also taken place in other countries around the world to mark Pride Month. Thousands marched in Romania and Poland, where far right parties have recently gained ground. In Gdansk, Witold was with his long-term partner Piotr, protesting his country's conservative laws. "We have been together for 12 years right now, or even more because it's a full 12 years so we are in the middle of the 13th. We just have a flat, we have a mortgage that we pay 50/50. But even if, for example, if I died, for example, my partner would have to fight for the flat together with my family." Meanwhile, in neighbouring Hungary, Pride marches are prohibited. Displays of symbols "referring to or promoting" sexual minorities are banned from government buildings. 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She has three kids, one who's a firefighter from Intercounty, and she literally risked her life to protect us and so it's heartbreaking that they would take her mother away just because they can.' The Los Angeles Police Department says it has not made any arrests related to the demonstration. American tennis star Coco Gauff says her maiden French Open trophy was "one I really wanted," after she beat top-ranked Aryna Sabalenka to secure the singles' title in Paris. The 21-year-old beat the Belarussian 6-7, 6-2, 6-4 win in difficult, windy conditions - but says it was a heartfelt victory. "I felt like this is one I really wanted, because I do think this was one of the tournaments that when I was younger that I felt I had the best shot of winning. So I just felt like if I went through my career and didn't get at least one of these, I would feel regrets and stuff. Today, playing Aryna, I was just, 'I just gotta go for it and try my best to get through the match'." It was a long-awaited success for Gauff, who lost the 2022 French Open final and has reached at least the quarter-finals in Paris in each of the previous four years. Gauff is the first woman to beat a world number one in a Grand Slam final from a set down, since Venus Williams against Lindsay Davenport at Wimbledon in 2005.

'No justification': minister seeks tariff breakthrough
'No justification': minister seeks tariff breakthrough

The Advertiser

time3 hours ago

  • The Advertiser

'No justification': minister seeks tariff breakthrough

Australia will keep pressuring the US to remove tariffs imposed by Donald Trump, the trade minister says, ahead of a likely meeting between Anthony Albanese and the president. The two leaders could meet on the sidelines of the G7 summit in Canada next week, with the economic measures imposed by Mr Trump around the world set to dominate discussions. As Australia looks to negotiate for an exemption on tariffs, Trade Minister Don Farrrell was optimistic a deal could be reached. "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," he told Sky News on Sunday. "There is no justification for the United States to impose tariffs on Australia ... we want all of the tariffs removed, not just some of them." Mr Trump recently signed off on doubling tariffs on exports on steel and aluminium from 25 to 50 per cent. All other Australian exports to the US have been slapped with a 10 per cent tariff. But opposition finance spokesman James Paterson said any meeting between the prime minister and US president should have happened sooner. He said an exemption on steel and aluminium secured by the UK showed it was possible Australia could receive a similar outcome. "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 program. Senator Farrell met with US trade representative Jamieson Greer last week and said he pushed the case for all of the economic measures to be removed. The minister was hopeful a similar approach that removed $20 billion worth of tariffs on Australian goods entering China could be used with America. "We didn't retaliate on that occasion, and bit by bit, we managed to get all of those tariffs that had been applied on Australia by China removed. I'd like to do the same with the United States," he said. "It's only by open discussion, honest discussion with out allies in the United States that I think we can do that." Senator Paterson said the coalition would be open to the idea of a critical minerals stockpile that could be used as a bargaining chip in any tariff negotiations. "It is something that Australia could do which would represent an economic opportunity and a strategic contribution," he said. As the US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth urged Australia to increase its defence spending by billions of dollars to 3.5 per cent of GDP, Senator Farrell said the federal government had already proved its commitment through the AUKUS submarine deal. Australia is looking to up its total spent on defence to 2.3 per cent. "We are committed to the defence of this country, we are committed to a significant uplift in the amount of spending," Senator Farrell said. "(AUKUS) is going to be a project that's worth more than $360 billion, so I think we've talked the talk." Senator Paterson said the opposition was still committed to its election platform of increasing defence spending to three per cent. Australia will keep pressuring the US to remove tariffs imposed by Donald Trump, the trade minister says, ahead of a likely meeting between Anthony Albanese and the president. The two leaders could meet on the sidelines of the G7 summit in Canada next week, with the economic measures imposed by Mr Trump around the world set to dominate discussions. As Australia looks to negotiate for an exemption on tariffs, Trade Minister Don Farrrell was optimistic a deal could be reached. "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," he told Sky News on Sunday. "There is no justification for the United States to impose tariffs on Australia ... we want all of the tariffs removed, not just some of them." Mr Trump recently signed off on doubling tariffs on exports on steel and aluminium from 25 to 50 per cent. All other Australian exports to the US have been slapped with a 10 per cent tariff. But opposition finance spokesman James Paterson said any meeting between the prime minister and US president should have happened sooner. He said an exemption on steel and aluminium secured by the UK showed it was possible Australia could receive a similar outcome. "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 program. Senator Farrell met with US trade representative Jamieson Greer last week and said he pushed the case for all of the economic measures to be removed. The minister was hopeful a similar approach that removed $20 billion worth of tariffs on Australian goods entering China could be used with America. "We didn't retaliate on that occasion, and bit by bit, we managed to get all of those tariffs that had been applied on Australia by China removed. I'd like to do the same with the United States," he said. "It's only by open discussion, honest discussion with out allies in the United States that I think we can do that." Senator Paterson said the coalition would be open to the idea of a critical minerals stockpile that could be used as a bargaining chip in any tariff negotiations. "It is something that Australia could do which would represent an economic opportunity and a strategic contribution," he said. As the US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth urged Australia to increase its defence spending by billions of dollars to 3.5 per cent of GDP, Senator Farrell said the federal government had already proved its commitment through the AUKUS submarine deal. Australia is looking to up its total spent on defence to 2.3 per cent. "We are committed to the defence of this country, we are committed to a significant uplift in the amount of spending," Senator Farrell said. "(AUKUS) is going to be a project that's worth more than $360 billion, so I think we've talked the talk." Senator Paterson said the opposition was still committed to its election platform of increasing defence spending to three per cent. Australia will keep pressuring the US to remove tariffs imposed by Donald Trump, the trade minister says, ahead of a likely meeting between Anthony Albanese and the president. The two leaders could meet on the sidelines of the G7 summit in Canada next week, with the economic measures imposed by Mr Trump around the world set to dominate discussions. As Australia looks to negotiate for an exemption on tariffs, Trade Minister Don Farrrell was optimistic a deal could be reached. "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," he told Sky News on Sunday. "There is no justification for the United States to impose tariffs on Australia ... we want all of the tariffs removed, not just some of them." Mr Trump recently signed off on doubling tariffs on exports on steel and aluminium from 25 to 50 per cent. All other Australian exports to the US have been slapped with a 10 per cent tariff. But opposition finance spokesman James Paterson said any meeting between the prime minister and US president should have happened sooner. He said an exemption on steel and aluminium secured by the UK showed it was possible Australia could receive a similar outcome. "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 program. Senator Farrell met with US trade representative Jamieson Greer last week and said he pushed the case for all of the economic measures to be removed. The minister was hopeful a similar approach that removed $20 billion worth of tariffs on Australian goods entering China could be used with America. "We didn't retaliate on that occasion, and bit by bit, we managed to get all of those tariffs that had been applied on Australia by China removed. I'd like to do the same with the United States," he said. "It's only by open discussion, honest discussion with out allies in the United States that I think we can do that." Senator Paterson said the coalition would be open to the idea of a critical minerals stockpile that could be used as a bargaining chip in any tariff negotiations. "It is something that Australia could do which would represent an economic opportunity and a strategic contribution," he said. As the US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth urged Australia to increase its defence spending by billions of dollars to 3.5 per cent of GDP, Senator Farrell said the federal government had already proved its commitment through the AUKUS submarine deal. Australia is looking to up its total spent on defence to 2.3 per cent. "We are committed to the defence of this country, we are committed to a significant uplift in the amount of spending," Senator Farrell said. "(AUKUS) is going to be a project that's worth more than $360 billion, so I think we've talked the talk." Senator Paterson said the opposition was still committed to its election platform of increasing defence spending to three per cent. Australia will keep pressuring the US to remove tariffs imposed by Donald Trump, the trade minister says, ahead of a likely meeting between Anthony Albanese and the president. The two leaders could meet on the sidelines of the G7 summit in Canada next week, with the economic measures imposed by Mr Trump around the world set to dominate discussions. As Australia looks to negotiate for an exemption on tariffs, Trade Minister Don Farrrell was optimistic a deal could be reached. "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," he told Sky News on Sunday. "There is no justification for the United States to impose tariffs on Australia ... we want all of the tariffs removed, not just some of them." Mr Trump recently signed off on doubling tariffs on exports on steel and aluminium from 25 to 50 per cent. All other Australian exports to the US have been slapped with a 10 per cent tariff. But opposition finance spokesman James Paterson said any meeting between the prime minister and US president should have happened sooner. He said an exemption on steel and aluminium secured by the UK showed it was possible Australia could receive a similar outcome. "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 program. Senator Farrell met with US trade representative Jamieson Greer last week and said he pushed the case for all of the economic measures to be removed. The minister was hopeful a similar approach that removed $20 billion worth of tariffs on Australian goods entering China could be used with America. "We didn't retaliate on that occasion, and bit by bit, we managed to get all of those tariffs that had been applied on Australia by China removed. I'd like to do the same with the United States," he said. "It's only by open discussion, honest discussion with out allies in the United States that I think we can do that." Senator Paterson said the coalition would be open to the idea of a critical minerals stockpile that could be used as a bargaining chip in any tariff negotiations. "It is something that Australia could do which would represent an economic opportunity and a strategic contribution," he said. As the US Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth urged Australia to increase its defence spending by billions of dollars to 3.5 per cent of GDP, Senator Farrell said the federal government had already proved its commitment through the AUKUS submarine deal. Australia is looking to up its total spent on defence to 2.3 per cent. "We are committed to the defence of this country, we are committed to a significant uplift in the amount of spending," Senator Farrell said. "(AUKUS) is going to be a project that's worth more than $360 billion, so I think we've talked the talk." Senator Paterson said the opposition was still committed to its election platform of increasing defence spending to three per cent.

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