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Scottish police brace for anti-Trump protests

Scottish police brace for anti-Trump protests

US President Donald Trump has told the UK to "get its act together" on illegal migration, after landing in Scotland for a five day visit.
Trump will open his new golf course and meet with the UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer in to discuss trade, the Middle East, Ukraine and AUKUS submarine deal .
Scottish police are bracing for thousands of people protesting the President's trip.
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'This masks other problems': Matt Canavan warns Australia's relationship with US isn't fixed after Trump's tariff decision
'This masks other problems': Matt Canavan warns Australia's relationship with US isn't fixed after Trump's tariff decision

Sky News AU

time40 minutes ago

  • Sky News AU

'This masks other problems': Matt Canavan warns Australia's relationship with US isn't fixed after Trump's tariff decision

Nationals Senator Matt Canavan has warned the good news on tariffs is just a 'mask' for bigger problems in Australia's relationship with the US, and called on Albanese to work harder to meet Donald Trump. The World According To Rowan Dean is available to view for subscribers. Join to watch the full episode. Despite Australia holding steady on the lowest rate of international tariffs for the US at 10%, Mr Canavan told Sky News host Rowan Dean on Friday Australia has to do more to strengthen ties with the U.S. government. 'It's great that we're not facing the higher tariffs as some other countries (are), but there is another side of the relationship here that seems to be just going missing, because the Prime Minister's missing,' he said. Mr Canavan said it is a strong concern that Anthony Albanese has made little effort to engage with President Trump since his election in November 2024, and believed the relationship cannot be mended until this has changed. 'The Prime Minister hasn't taken the effort to go to the United States and meet Donald Trump when 20 other world leaders have done so, including the President of Mauritania,' he said. 'Small countries in Africa have got audiences with the President, but our Prime Minister hasn't. 'It's getting close on a year now since the President was elected, and it's hard to explain why the Prime Minister is seemingly running scared from Washington DC.' Another key issue Mr Canavan pointed towards as an example for fractured tensions between the US and Australia was the approach to defence. Mr Canavan said the government's lack of response towards a public signal from the US government to increase defence manufacturing with Australia, as well as Australia's own defence spending, is still a simmering issue. 'The U.S. administration has signalled through Pete Hegseth that they'd like to work with Australia to develop more manufacturing of 115-millimetre artillery shells, guided weapons systems and radar repair facilities,' he said. 'There's been basically zero response from the Australian government, certainly nothing in public. 'The US administration at the same time have asked us to lift our defence spending, which is reasonable if they're going to help us with our industrial capacity.'

Relief in Southeast Asia as Trump's tariffs level field
Relief in Southeast Asia as Trump's tariffs level field

Perth Now

time2 hours ago

  • Perth Now

Relief in Southeast Asia as Trump's tariffs level field

Southeast Asian countries are breathing a sigh of relief after the US announced tariffs on their exports that were far lower than threatened and levelled the playing field with a rate of about 19 per cent across the region's biggest economies. US President Donald Trump's global tariffs offensive has shaken Southeast Asia, a region heavily reliant on exports and manufacturing and in many areas boosted by supply chain shifts from China. Thailand, Malaysia and Cambodia joined Indonesia and the Philippines with a 19 per cent US tariff, a month after Washington imposed a 20 per cent levy on regional manufacturing powerhouse Vietnam. Southeast Asia - with economies collectively worth more than $US3.8 trillion ($A5.9 trillion) - had raced to offer concessions and secure deals with the United States, the top export market for much of the region. Malaysia's trade ministry said its rate, down from a threatened 25 per cent, was a positive outcome without compromising on what it called "red line" items. Thailand's finance minister said the reduction from 36 per cent to 19 per cent would help his country's struggling economy face global challenges ahead. "It helps maintain Thailand's competitiveness on the global stage, boosts investor confidence and opens the door to economic growth, increased income and new opportunities," Pichai Chunhavajira said on Friday. The extent of progress on bilateral trade deals with the United States was not immediately clear, with Washington so far reaching broad "framework agreements" with Indonesia and Vietnam, with scope to negotiate further. Thailand was about a third of the way there, Pichai said. The United States on Friday slashed the tariff rate for Cambodia to 19 per cent from earlier levies of 36 per cent and 49 per cent, a major boost for its crucial garments sector. "If the US maintained 49 per cent or 36 per cent, that industry would collapse in my opinion," Cambodia's Deputy Prime Minister and top trade negotiator Sun Chanthol said. In Thailand and Malaysia, business groups cheered a tariff rate that could signal a maintenance of the status quo between rival markets, among them beneficiaries of so-called "China plus one" trade. Much remains to be worked out by the Trump administration, including non-tariff barriers, rules of origin and what constitutes trans-shipment for the purposes of evading duties, a measure targeting goods originating from China with no or limited value added, where a 40 per cent tariff would apply. Vietnam has one of the world's largest trade surpluses with the United States, worth more than $US120 billion in 2024, and has been often singled out as a hub for the illegal rerouting of Chinese goods to America. It reached an agreement in July that slashed a levy from a threatened 46 per cent to 20 per cent, but concerns remain among some businesses that its heavy reliance on raw materials and components imported from China could lead to a wider application of the 40 per cent rate.

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