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Picture bigger than Albanese's China visit: Xi Jinping sees Australia as a fruit ripe for plucking

Picture bigger than Albanese's China visit: Xi Jinping sees Australia as a fruit ripe for plucking

It's safe to say Anthony Albanese's trip to China is a big deal for the prime minister, with his walk along the Great Wall placing the Labor leader alongside party icon Gough Whitlam, and former US president Richard Nixon, in the history books.
But behind the carefully stage-managed moments, pressure from the United States and talk of the Darwin Port is another truth: Albanese's trip to China is also a big deal for President Xi Jinping. Speaking with host Samantha Selinger-Morris on The Morning Edition podcast, our international and political editor Peter Hartcher talks about the reality behind Xi's current relationship with Australia.
Click the player or watch the video below to listen to the full episode, or read on for an edited extract of the conversation.
Selinger-Morris: We keep being told just what a massive deal this trip to China is. And in particular, how much of Anthony Albanese's focus has been on strengthening our trade ties with China. So how much trade is he talking about? Is it really that big a deal?
Hartcher: Yes it is. The trade is big, yes. It's by far Australia's biggest trading partner. Biggest export market. And it's the potential in the future. That's the real excitement in this trip. Although oddly enough, it's been largely overlooked by the media covering the story, with the honourable exception of our own correspondent, Paul Sakkal. But that's been a peculiarity of this trip.
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Selinger-Morris: As in, it's been overshadowed by defence questions for Albanese?
Hartcher: It's been overshadowed by the pursuit of … a non-issue, actually … it's a real oddity.
The media coverage, the media travelling party with Albanese – because each major media outlet has a reporter on the trip travelling with the prime minister, including our Paul Sakkal, [who] has done an outstanding job – but the general pack has approached it like, little kids walking past a haunted house, waiting to be scared, waiting to get that shiver of fear, waiting for something to go badly wrong.
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