logo
Albanese says US tariffs on Australia ‘should be zero' as leaders prepare for end of Trump's 90-day pause

Albanese says US tariffs on Australia ‘should be zero' as leaders prepare for end of Trump's 90-day pause

The Guardian30-06-2025
Anthony Albanese says trade tariffs placed on Australia by the US Trump administration 'should be zero' as leaders around the world prepare for a second Liberation Day announcement following a 90-day pause on tariffs.
Relations between the US and Australia have been strained on numerous fronts as the US president, Donald Trump, looks to impose tariffs on global imports and pressures western countries to lift defence spending commitments.
The 90-day pause on a minimum baseline tariff rate of 10% is expected to lift next week and Albanese said Australia has continued to put forward its case that it should be exempt.
Sign up for Guardian Australia's breaking news email
'We continue to put our case forward that it shouldn't be 10. It should be zero. That is what a reciprocal tariff will be. We have a US Free Trade Agreement, of course, and we've put forward very clearly our arguments. We'll continue to do so,' the prime minister said on Monday.
Earlier this year, the US trade body placed Australia's subsidised medicine system, meat and fruit industries and refreshed media bargaining code in its crosshairs for higher tariffs, before Trump ultimately announced a 10% baseline tariff on goods from Australia.
Separately, Australian steel and aluminium exports to the US face a 25% tariff. Trump has flagged the US could boost the tariffs to as high as 50%, prompting the ire of Australian ministers who said it was not the 'act of a friend'.
Amid the trade dispute, the US administration has urged countries including Australia to significantly raise defence spending to at least 3% of GDP, and a snap review of the Aukus deal with the UK and Australia.
The US Pentagon announced a 30-day review of the Biden administration pact in early June by US defense undersecretary, Elbridge Colby, to determine whether it remained aligned with the the president's 'America first' agenda.
Albanese said Australia had advocated for the agreement at 'every opportunity' and flagged an upcoming meeting with the UK – part of the two countries' annual strategic dialogue, Aukmin– as another opportunity to highlight its advantages.
'Aukus benefits three countries: Australia, the UK and the US. But it does something more than that as well. It benefits the world because it makes our region and the world more secure because it is such an important agreement going forward,' he said.
Colby, a critic of the Aukus deal, had previously urged Australia to lift its defence spending to 3% of GDP whilethe US defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, had floated 5% of GDP in response to China's growing military.
Australia is currently on track to lift defence spending from about $53bn a year, or about 2% of GDP – to an estimated $100bn, or 2.4% of GDP, by 2033-34.
On Monday, Albanese reiterated there was no plan to increase defence spending, when asked whether it could increase next April with the release of the National Defence Strategy.
'$57bn isn't nothing ... what we want to do is to use defence procurement, not just to assist in the defence of Australia, but also to be a facilitator of that advanced manufacturing,' he said.
The foreign affairs minister, Penny Wong, visits Washington DC this week to meet with US, Japanese and Indian counterparts at a meeting of the Quad.
The finance minister Katy Gallagher told the Today Show she had 'no doubt' defence cooperation between the four countries would be raised.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How I went from broke and homeless to making $700K
How I went from broke and homeless to making $700K

Daily Mail​

time8 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

How I went from broke and homeless to making $700K

A man who went from completely broke and homeless to making $700,000 a year without a college degree has revealed how he turned his life around. Michael Brandon Pope, 26, from Las Vegas , Nevada , said he grew up in an 'upper class' household with his dad making over six figures through his booming truck business. But in 2008, his family lost 'everything they had' between the market crash and a 'series of bad rental tenants,' and suddenly, they went from living a life of luxury to being absolutely broke. They ultimately lost their home, resulting in Michael, his three siblings, and his parents sometimes living out of their car, finding a cheap motel for the night, or 'couch surfing between different family members or family friends.' While his parents tried to get back on their feet by working extra jobs, his mom's health took a downturn which led to her having to retire when he was he was a teen. For years, he spent his days wondering where they'd sleep that night or if they'd have enough money to eat. Michael got his first job at age 16 - as soon as he was legally allowed to - and he would work tirelessly and use all his earnings to try to help his family. 'I couldn't wait to work,' he said during an exclusive chat with the Daily Mail. 'Most of my money ended up going to help us keep a roof over our heads and to put food on the table. '[Or I would use the money to] help to pay for food or bills at whoever's house we were currently couch surfing at.' A determined Michael dreamed of a better life for himself and his family, so he got to work on teaching himself how to code after one of his high school football coaches told him how lucrative the world of programming could be. After he finished high school he started taking classes at a local college while also working a job at Dunkin Donuts, which meant waking up in the early hours of the morning to make sure he had time for both. 'The coffee shop I worked at was all the way in north Las Vegas and I had the opening shift which started at 6am. 'So I would wake up at 3.30am to get ready for work, catch the bus at 4.15/4.30am, and arrive on the other side of town for my shift to start at 6,' he remembered. 'While I was working at this coffee shop, I was taking 15 credits at UNLV and also teaching myself how to code. 'I would get off at 1pm, go across the street to another coffee shop with Wi-Fi, and learn how to code building side projects and apply to entry level programming positions.' Any free time he had was spent watching YouTube videos or reading articles on coding, and 'applying to entry level programming positions.' In 2018, Michael's hard work paid off as he landed his first real programming job at a 'local E-Commerce company that sold vape pens' that paid him $35,000 a year. 'They needed help setting up the software for their distribution website/software,' he explained. He said that despite showing up late - 'the Uber driver went the wrong way' - and not having a college degree, when the hiring manager saw how well he could program he offered him the job. He dropped out of college for the gig, but after taxes his earnings came to only about $600 per week. Even so, he tirelessly saved and used the money to start renting a two-bedroom apartment for himself, his three youngster siblings, and his parents. In the years that followed, Michael worked various programming jobs as he made his way up in the tech industry, eventually scoring jobs at huge companies like Hulu, Disney+, and Warner Bros. He eventually launched his own successful software company. Flash forward to now, seven years later, and Michael brings in about $350,000 annually - and he's had years where he's made closer to $700,000. He now lives in a luxury apartment and bought a five-bedroom mansion for his parents and siblings. And his lifestyle is certainly a far cry from the years that he would work tirelessly just to have enough money to eat. 'I would say that I do live pretty lavishly,' he confessed. 'I eat out multiple times a week at steakhouses and sushi restaurants, I spend quite a bit of money on things that I enjoy like extra wide monitors. 'Within the last month me and some friends went to eat and gamble at the casinos, I spent roughly $1,500 on that. 'I've had months where I spent $1,000 in a month on Uber Eats. When I looked at the month I moved into this apartment. 'I went from famine to feast in a relatively short period of time, so I think I didn't manage my money very wisely or even consider it until the last couple of years.' Michael explained that while the years of his life when he was broke and homeless were extremely difficult, he believes they sparked a 'drive' in him that has now led to his success. '[I had] a huge drive to get myself and my family out of that situation,' said Michael. 'The drive has since stuck with me. [Even now I'm] always feeling like I have to work exceptionally hard to prove myself, I look back on it as a blessing and a curse.' In the end, he said he hopes others in a similar situation will use his story as a reminder that they 'don't have to accept bad circumstances or fall victim to things outside of your control.' 'I didn't chose to be homeless, or for my parents health to fail, or for the 2008 market crash to happen, the list goes on and on,' he reflected. 'I could have given up and accepted my fate because I didn't know for certain I would be successful.

Is the ‘woke' backlash killing body positivity?
Is the ‘woke' backlash killing body positivity?

Channel 4

time9 minutes ago

  • Channel 4

Is the ‘woke' backlash killing body positivity?

Is fashion the latest thing to be swallowed into politics, culture war and the backlash on woke? Stick-thin models with protruding bones were the marketing choice of Zara for a new campaign – the ad has just been banned by the Advertising Standards Authority as irresponsible. And the fallout from Sydney Sweeney's ad campaign for American Eagle jeans keeps growing – a few years ago accusations of white supremacy and promoting the right wing might have caused a share price to plummet. But after Donald Trump described the ad as the hottest ad out there American Eagle stock rocketed. Are we back in the 90's or even the 30's? Ad agencies have always looked for ways to get noticed – but is the war on woke also sweeping away years of progress on body positivity and diversity? On this episode of The Fourcast, Krishnan Guru-Murthy is joined by Katie Glass, who writes for the Times and Megan Jayne Crabbe – a writer, presenter and activist for body positivity and feminism.

‘We're not leaving': Border Patrol uses ‘Trojan Horse' unmarked truck to resume deportation raids
‘We're not leaving': Border Patrol uses ‘Trojan Horse' unmarked truck to resume deportation raids

The Independent

time9 minutes ago

  • The Independent

‘We're not leaving': Border Patrol uses ‘Trojan Horse' unmarked truck to resume deportation raids

A group of masked Border Patrol agents leapt out of an unmarked commercial truck and arrested 16 people on Wednesday outside a Home Depot store in the Westlake section of Los Angeles, in an operation critics say violates a series of recent court rulings against the Trump administration. 'For those who thought immigration enforcement had stopped in Southern California, think again,' Acting U.S. Attorney Bill Essayli, whose district includes Los Angeles, wrote in a statement on X. 'The enforcement of federal law is not negotiable, and there are no sanctuaries from the reach of the federal government.' The raid, which officials later called Operation Trojan Horse, began around 6:45am, according to bystanders. A yellow Penske box truck reportedly approached day laborers in the parking lot of the store and someone asked for workers in Spanish. As a crowd gathered, the doors to the truck's trailer flew open and agents jumped out, chasing people through the parking lot. "This is the worst feeling ever," a day laborer who identified himself as Caesar told The Los Angeles Times of watching the raid. Critics said the raid violated a Friday ruling from the federal Ninth Circuit Court, which upheld a temporary restraining order barring Border Patrol and Immigration and Customs Enforcement from carrying out roving immigration raids solely on the basis of people's perceived ethnicity, language, location, or occupation. The ruling came after a lower court paused such raids in response to a lawsuit from immigrants and civil rights groups accusing federal agents of racial profiling during their immigration sweeps across the Los Angeles area, making arrests that included a U.S. citizen and a lawfully present day laborer outside a Home Depot. 'Border Patrol at a Home Depot in Los Angeles days after the 9th circuit affirmed a court order that purports to block this exact behavior,' David Bier, director of immigration studies at the libertarian Cato Institute think tank, wrote on Bluesky. 'They don't even know who they're chasing! This is insane. Send them all to jail.' The Department of Homeland Security believes that the MS-13 gang has a 'chokehold' on the area, part of the rationale for such 'highly optic immigration raids,' Matt Finn of Fox News, who embedded with agents for the Home Depot operation, reported on X. The Independent has contacted the Border Patrol, the Department of Homeland Security, and U.S. Attorney Bill Essayli's office for comment. 'Penske strictly prohibits the transportation of people in the cargo area of its vehicles under any circumstances,' Penske said in a statement on X. 'The company was not made aware that its trucks would be used in today's operation and did not authorize this. Penske will reach out to DHS and reinforce its policy to avoid improper use of its vehicles in the future.' The Border Patrol has raided the store parking lot before, and Wednesday's operation came as the agency continued to carry out operations across the Los Angeles area. 'Different day, different illegal aliens, same objective,' the Border Patrol's Gregory Bovino, commander of the multi-agency Operation At Large, wrote on X, sharing video of agents arresting men outside a car wash. 'We're on a mission here in Los Angeles. And we're not leaving until we accomplish our goals.' Los Angeles, which has one of the largest immigrant populations in the country, has been at the center of the Trump administration's unprecedented immigration crackdown. Federal officials sent National Guard troops and Marines to the city over the objection of local and state officials in the face of mass protests against federal raids. The Border Patrol has made use of rules allowing it to operate within 100 miles of any U.S. border to carry out large-scale raids across Los Angeles, Sacramento, and farm areas in the state's Central Valley.

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