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Trump receives mixed reaction from Kennedy Center audience

Trump receives mixed reaction from Kennedy Center audience

News.com.au2 days ago

U.S. President Donald Trump faced a loud combination of boos and cheers on Wednesday (June 11) as he attended his first event at the Kennedy Center, the performing arts venue that has undergone a conservative overhaul during his administration.

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John Tucker, Andrew Jenner to seek preselection to run as National Party candidates in the Tasmanian state election
John Tucker, Andrew Jenner to seek preselection to run as National Party candidates in the Tasmanian state election

ABC News

timean hour ago

  • ABC News

John Tucker, Andrew Jenner to seek preselection to run as National Party candidates in the Tasmanian state election

Looking for a return to Tasmania's Parliament, John Tucker says he feels "vindicated". "I think that our politicians need to have a good, hard look at themselves and think about how they can learn how to work with people … I don't think that the Liberal Party knew how to work with us," Mr Tucker said. The former Liberal MP blew up Jeremy Rockliff's first government when he and fellow backbencher Lara Alexander quit the party over concerns about debt and transparency. While the pair signed a supply and confidence agreement to allow the Liberals to govern in minority, that relationship ultimately deteriorated. It prompted Mr Rockliff to call an election in March last year. While voters rejected Mr Tucker's independent tilt at that election, he has put his hand up for National Party preselection this time around, in the seat of Lyons. "I think that I'm a good fit with the Nats coming from a rural and regional area … I'm a farmer," he said. While he had promised to leave politics if he wasn't re-elected, he has now said regional Tasmanians were still not being heard. Preselection for the Nationals is open until next week, with the party aiming to run candidates in Bass, Braddon and Lyons. "I do think that there is a big opportunity there for us to pick up more people or pick up more votes — it's what I'm hearing on the street," Mr Tucker said. Former Jacqui Lambie Network MP Andrew Jenner will seek preselection to run as a National Party candidate in the seat of Lyons. Nationals Senate leader Bridget McKenzie has been in Tasmania this week, in an attempt to help the local branch gain traction in the early stages of the campaign. She told reporters on Thursday the Nationals would focus on primary industries such as salmon and forestry, as well as health and education. "It's been very, very clear over recent weeks that the two major parties have been more focused on each other and power in parliament than actually focused on the needs and interests and concerns of everyday Tasmanians," Senator McKenzie said. The party is opposed to the Macquarie Point stadium, but Chair of the National Party Tasmania Branch Pip Allwright said the party would consider the stadium 2.0 proposal, and see how the "figures all stacked up". Asked what would be considered a successful result, Ms Allwright said the party would love "one or two" MPs elected in each of the divisions it was standing candidates. She said it was a "completely different kettle of fish this time", citing help from Senator McKenzie and the party's youth wing. "We went in very green last time … we're far more professional [now]." While the National Party has branded itself as the voice of regional Australia, it has struggled to gain a foothold in Tasmania. Political analyst Richard Herr described it as a "chequered history". Dr Herr said the Nationals were not able to establish themselves in Tasmania when the party formed on the mainland in the 1920s. "Essentially the Labor Party established itself as an effective representative for rural interests and it occupied that space," he said. Queensland National premier Joh Bjelke-Petersen toured Tasmania during his ill-fated push to become prime minister in the 1970s and 1980s, and later resided in the state after forming a close friendship with businessman Peter Murray. In recent decades, a Tasmanian affiliate to the federal National Party has been registered, and deregistered several times, most recently in 2013 and 2018. Dr Herr said the Nationals had struggled to find a niche in Tasmania. "We are the only really small, regionalised part of Australia, so the politics tends to be a bit more personal, a bit more local," he said. Pauline Hanson's One Nation and the Jacqui Lambie Network — both minor parties that have appealed to disaffected voters — have decided not to field candidates in this election. Dr Herr said the Nationals may have seen a "window of opportunity", with the other minor parties not running candidates. Election analyst Kevin Bonham said he expected former JLN voters to "go back to Labor". However, he said the "unusual circumstances" of both major parties supporting the Macquarie Point stadium — Labor was opposed to it on principle at the previous election — could make a difference to the Nationals' chances. Dr Bonham said the party would need prominent candidates but questioned whether the Nationals could be successful in Tasmania. "In general in Tasmania, there's not much demand for a separate rural branded party — I think that's particularly because the distances are smaller — the bush is not so isolated."

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