logo
Australia PM Albanese to meet with Trump on G7 sidelines in Canada

Australia PM Albanese to meet with Trump on G7 sidelines in Canada

Reuters9 hours ago

SYDNEY, June 15 (Reuters) - Australia's Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said he would meet with U.S. President Donald Trump at the Group of Seven summit in Canada for talks on the AUKUS defence pact and tariffs, in what will be the first face-to-face meeting between the two leaders.
Albanese, who this month said he was looking forward to a "face-to-face" meeting with Trump without saying when it would occur, said he would meet Trump on Tuesday on the sidelines of the G7 summit, which starts on Sunday.
"We do have a meeting scheduled. Obviously, there are issues that the US President is dealing with at the moment, but I expect that we will be able to have a constructive engagement," Albanese said in Seattle on Saturday, according to an official transcript of his remarks.
"Obviously, we'll raise tariffs, we'll raise the importance as well of AUKUS, and we will have a discussion as two friends should," Albanese added.
Washington's request for Canberra to raise defence spending to 3.5% of gross domestic product from 2% is also expected to feature in the meeting.
The confirmation of talks comes after the Pentagon said this week it was reviewing its AUKUS nuclear submarine partnership with Australia and Britain. Australia, which sees the submarines as critical to its defense amid China's expansive military buildup, has said it will work closely with the U.S. on the review.
AUKUS, to which Australia has pledged A$368 billion over three decades, was formed in 2021 to address worries about China's growing power.
"I look forward to building on the very constructive phone conversations that we've had on the three occasions that we've had the opportunity to talk," Albanese added.
A key U.S. security ally, Australia on Saturday welcomed a key U.S. warship to Sydney Harbour ahead of joint war games that will see more than 30,000 personnel from 19 militaries take part in Talisman Sabre, the largest Australian-U.S. war-fighting exercise.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

G7 has been Trump-proofed to avoid trouble – here's how
G7 has been Trump-proofed to avoid trouble – here's how

Telegraph

time29 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

G7 has been Trump-proofed to avoid trouble – here's how

The Canadian organisers of the G7 summit are taking no chances with Donald Trump this week, ditching the usual joint communiqué, padding the event with extra guests and reducing the amount of time when the world leaders sit around the same table. It is the latest example of how global institutions are adapting to the return of an unpredictable and combative figure. A diplomat in Washington DC, who has seen the schedule, said it included fewer plenary sessions of the full group and more one-on-one meetings 'There's a lot more of that than at other summits,' he said, 'which would make sense if you are worried about one person causing trouble.' The last time Mr Trump attended a G7 summit in Canada he stormed off early, ripping up a joint communiqué and leaving a trail of withering tweets behind him. His blanket use of trade tariffs has already set nerves on edge, according to Matthew P Goodman, who was deputy to the US G7 Sherpa during the Obama administration, one of the figures doing the heavy lifting on negotiations. 'Those two issues hang over this upcoming summit, and are going to make it very challenging for the host, Mark Carney, to manage this,' he said. Canadian diplomats were buoyed by their new prime minister's performance at the White House recently, when he avoided the sort or tongue lashing delivered to some other world leaders. But organisers are leaving nothing to chance. World leaders are due to begin arriving on Sunday. They will fly into the international airport in Calgary from where they will helicopter to the picturesque setting of Kananaskis, deep in the Canadian Rockies. Organisers have padded the number of attendees by inviting leaders from India, Brazil, Ukraine, Australia and Saudi Arabia (although Crown Prince Mohamed Bin Salman reportedly will not be attending). Cyril Ramaphosa, the South African president, is coming. He knows better than most how Mr Trump can undo the best laid plans after being ambushed last month in the Oval Office and accused of allowing a 'white genocide' to unfold. Mark Rutte, Nato secretary general, and António Guterres, the UN secretary general, are expected to attend. There will also be a session on fentanyl smuggling, a cause particularly close to Mr Trump's heart. The result is more breakaway bilateral meetings and fewer chances for Mr Trump to clog up the agenda. Mr Goodman said: 'Any host of these forums, if they're smart, will minimise the time around the table. You need a certain amount of that, but you want to allow for a lot of time on the margins for bilateral conversations and meetings' In 2018, Justin Trudeau, Canada's prime minister at the time, presided over a G7 summit where Mr Trump abruptly pulled the US out of a previously agreed communiqué, before blasting his host as 'dishonest and weak'. He flew out of Canada early, apparently upset at the way Mr Trudeau had talked about Canadian tariffs on US exports. It meant weeks of careful negotiations on easing trade tensions between the US and the European Union went up in smoke. This time Mr Carney is preparing to issue a chairman's statement, according to The Toronto Star, avoiding the need for all the parties to agree on a joint position on awkward issues such as Ukraine or Israel's strikes on Iran. 'Our hope is that Mr Trump will join us in getting tougher on Russia and push through new sanctions,' said a senior diplomat from a G7 nation. 'But he could equally say, no, let's give them another two weeks and then there is no chance for agreement.' That makes it almost impossible to make progress on a joint text ahead of the summit, he added. 'The problem is that no one knows what's on Trump's mind,' he said. 'Negotiating in the absence of that is not easy.' The G7 summit is not the only high-stakes diplomacy this month. Nato leaders will assemble in The Hague next week, where defence spending will be top of the agenda. Summit organisers there are preparing a one-page communiqué, The Telegraph revealed on Friday, designed to suit Mr Trump's attention span. It will be almost entirely focused on one of the president's pet issues and the historic decision to more than double spending on defence by leaders to meet new capability targets for deterring a Russian invasion. Mr Trump stormed out of his last Nato summit in the UK in 2019, abandoning plans for a press conference, after Mr Trudeau was caught on video apparently mocking the American president. He was talking to Boris Johnson, the British prime minister, and Emmanuel Macron, the French president, discussing how Mr Trump liked to use photo opportunities to talk to the press.

Aussie construction leader makes a shocking admission about the state of the country's housing market
Aussie construction leader makes a shocking admission about the state of the country's housing market

Daily Mail​

time35 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Aussie construction leader makes a shocking admission about the state of the country's housing market

This boss of one of Australia's largest builders has declared the housing industry is still under intense pressure, despite an easing in supply chain disruptions, labour shortages and soaring material prices. Metricon Chief Executive Brad Duggan said the collapse of thousands of construction firms in the years following the Covid pandemic had thinned the industry. He said while that was good for his business - there is less competition - it could worsen the nation's critical shortage of dwellings and further spike house prices. Mr Duggan said a home in 2025 had grown about 50 per cent more expensive than a like-for-like home in 2019 and that passing those costs onto consumers had become increasingly challenging because 'people just can't afford those houses'. Half of the rise in price he attributed to material costs and the other half to labour shortages. Worryingly, he claimed that without major reforms, the industry does not have a chance of improving housing supply. '[Builders collapsing] is great from a competitive point of view,' he told The Elephant in the Room property podcast. 'But not from the point of view of the pretty significant housing challenge that Australia faces.' Mr Duggan saw the impacts of industry disruptions firsthand. He joined Metricon midway through 2022 as chief financial and operating officer, when the firm was financially struggling. Since then, Mr Duggan has led an $80 million turnaround, pulling the company back into the black, garnering him a promotion to chief executive role. He said the years since Covid pandemic had been so challenging for the building industry because it disrupted about 20 years of relative stability. Before the outbreak of Covid-19, he explained, companies could reliably predict costs and were empowered to offer customers fixed-price contracts that wouldn't shift through long construction timeframes. 'Then you hit quite a tumultuous and unprecedented time with Covid, we had a war in Ukraine, which is where a large amount of lumber comes from, plus all the disruption of shipping,' Mr Duggan said. 'In effectively 18 months, we saw a 45 per cent increase in input costs. When you put that into an environment where you've guaranteed a customer's price and locked it in for 12 months, it becomes really difficult.' The following construction 'boom', spurred by the HomeBuilder stimulus package, was, as a result, 'profitless', he said. Seven thousand operators went under in the ensuing three years, leaving surviving builders struggling to keep up with housing needs. 'You've got big monsters like Porter Davis in that group, and that organisation alone was building 2500 homes,' Mr Duggan said. 'That's a significant amount of capability that went missing.' Other builders tried to exit contracts or inflate costs in a bid to remain viable, which left Aussie customers in precarious positions. Mr Duggan said that was not an option for Metricon. 'We'd made a lot of commitments to customers and once we sign a contract and we're on site, there's no way we'd even think about trying to reprice,' Mr Duggan said. 'That was a non-negotiable for us. 'The secret to success for us was the grind. We had to find a way to get to the end of that workbook that was caught in the fixed-price contract scenario.' The building boss said he worked with all sides of the business to try buy time for projects. He liaised with suppliers, financiers and trade credit insurers, before even undertaking a restructure of the whole company. Mr Duggan said he was concerned by the greater housing challenge in Australia, despite his own successes in navigating the past three years. 'There are fewer builders out there with the ability to make a difference in [addressing] housing supply,' he said. 'The other thing you can't forget is the impact these builders have in their communities. If a big builder falls over, the consequences … are significant.' Metricon, with Mr Duggan at the helm, has called for a national housing summit to address the challenges in the building industry. He wants the government to ease restrictions on skilled migration to alleviate labour shortages as well as a focus on mental health support to retain workers already in the field. He also believes more innovation and flexibility should be encouraged in the sector, specifically around building practices and management of supply chains.

Israel and Iran trade strikes for third day as nuclear talks called off
Israel and Iran trade strikes for third day as nuclear talks called off

North Wales Chronicle

timean hour ago

  • North Wales Chronicle

Israel and Iran trade strikes for third day as nuclear talks called off

Planned talks on Iran's nuclear programme, which could provide an off-ramp, were called off. The region braced for a protracted conflict after Israel's surprise bombardment of Iran's nuclear and military sites on Friday killed several top generals and nuclear scientists, and neither side showed any sign of backing down. Iran said Israel struck two oil refineries, raising the prospect of a broader assault on Iran's heavily sanctioned energy industry that could affect global markets. The Israeli military, in a social media post, warned Iranians to evacuate arms factories, signalling what could be a further widening of the campaign. At around noon local time, explosions were heard again in the Iranian capital Tehran. US President Donald Trump has expressed full support for Israel's actions while warning Iran that it can only avoid further destruction by agreeing to a new nuclear deal. Iranian foreign minister Abbas Araghchi said on Sunday that if the Israeli strikes on Iran stop, then 'our responses will also stop'. He said the United States 'is a partner in these attacks and must take responsibility'. New explosions echoed across Tehran and were reported elsewhere in the country early on Sunday, but there was no update to a death toll put out the day before by Iran's UN ambassador, who said 78 people had been killed and more than 320 wounded. In Israel, at least 10 people were killed in Iranian strikes overnight and into Sunday, according to Israel's Magen David Adom rescue service, bringing the country's total death toll to 13. The country's main international airport and airspace remained closed for a third day. Israeli strikes targeted Iran's Defence Ministry early on Sunday after hitting air defences, military bases and sites associated with its nuclear programme. The killing of several top generals and nuclear scientists in targeted strikes indicated that Israeli intelligence has penetrated Iran at the highest levels. In Israel, at least six people, including a 10-year-old and a nine-year-old, were killed when a missile hit an apartment building in Bat Yam, near Tel Aviv. Daniel Hadad, a local police commander, said 180 people were wounded and seven are still missing. An Associated Press (AP) reporter saw streets lined with damaged and destroyed buildings, bombed out cars and shards of glass. Responders used a drone at points to look for survivors. Some people could be seen leaving the area with suitcases. Another four people, including a 13-year-old, were killed and 24 wounded when a missile struck a building in the Arab town of Tamra in northern Israel. A strike on the central city of Rehovot wounded 42. The Weizmann Institute of Science, an important centre for research in Rehovot, said 'there were a number of hits to buildings on the campus'. It said no-one was harmed. Israel has sophisticated multi-tiered air defences that are able to detect and intercept missiles fired at populated areas or key infrastructure, but officials acknowledge it is imperfect. World leaders made urgent calls to de-escalate. The attack on nuclear sites sets a 'dangerous precedent', China's foreign minister said. The region is already on edge as Israel seeks to annihilate Hamas, an Iranian ally, in the Gaza Strip, where the war is still raging after Hamas's October 7 2023 attack. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu brushed off such calls, saying Israel's strikes so far are 'nothing compared to what they will feel under the sway of our forces in the coming days'. Israel, the sole though undeclared nuclear-armed state in the Middle East – said it launched the attack to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon. The two countries have been regional adversaries for decades. Iran has always said its nuclear programme was peaceful, and the US and others have assessed it has not pursued a weapon since 2003. But it has enriched ever larger stockpiles of uranium to near weapons-grade levels in recent years and was believed to have been able to develop multiple weapons within months if it chose to do so. The UN's atomic watchdog censured Iran last week for not complying with its obligations. Mr Araghchi said Israel had targeted an oil refinery near Tehran and another in the country's Bushehr province on the Persian Gulf. He said Iran had also targeted 'economic' sites in Israel, without elaborating. Mr Araghchi was speaking to diplomats in his first public appearance since the initial Israeli strikes. Semi-official Iranian news agencies reported that an Israeli drone strike had caused a 'strong explosion' at an Iranian natural-gas processing plant. Israel's military did not immediately comment. The extent of damage at the South Pars natural gas field was not immediately clear. Such sites have air defence systems around them, which Israel has been targeting. An oil refinery was also damaged in the northern Israeli city of Haifa, according to the firm operating it. Bazan Group said pipelines and transmission lines between facilities were damaged, forcing some downstream facilities to be shut down. It said no-one was wounded. The Arab Gulf country of Oman, which has been mediating indirect talks between the US and Iran over Tehran's nuclear programme, said a sixth round planned for Sunday would not take place. 'We remain committed to talks and hope the Iranians will come to the table soon,' a senior US official said. Mr Araghchi said on Saturday that the nuclear talks were 'unjustifiable' after Israel's strikes, which he said were the 'result of the direct support by Washington'. In a post on his Truth Social account early on Sunday, Mr Trump reiterated that the US was not involved in the attacks on Iran and warned that any retaliation directed against it would bring an American response 'at levels never seen before'. 'However, we can easily get a deal done between Iran and Israel, and end this bloody conflict!!!' he wrote.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store