logo
No phones, no handlers, no nice snacks: day one in Chalmers' VIP lock-up

No phones, no handlers, no nice snacks: day one in Chalmers' VIP lock-up

The Age12 hours ago
The catering staff of Parliament House are taking to heart the issues central to Prime Minister Anthony Albanese's economic roundtable.
As the late lunch break started on the first day of the three-day love-in, the staff rolled out the remnants of the morning's work. A trolley with four large but near-empty hot water urns and a collection of mugs stained by lukewarm coffee.
What was noticeable was what was absent from the trolley. No discarded sandwich wrappers. No waxed paper with chocolate muffin remains. Not even a container of half-eaten Venetian biscuits.
Traditionally, gatherings of the grand, self-important and policy wonks in federal parliament are catered as if an army is dropping by for a week.
But perhaps in a sign of the topic matter, the economic roundtable was focused only on what was necessary to get the collective minds of business leaders, unionists, academics, community groups and politicians thinking. In this case, coffee, tea and some plain biscuits.
Loading
At one point, Treasurer Jim Chalmers – perhaps getting in some training for running a meeting in the federal cabinet room – told those assembled they could get up and walk around to stretch their legs. But none took up the option, focused as they were on the issues at hand.
Without mobile phones (which were left at the cabinet door) or handlers or media managers, it was left to the almost 30 people in the room to work through the agenda put in front of them.
And that agenda kicked off with an issue close to the heart of almost every person on the planet, particularly the current occupant of the White House, a discussion about tariffs.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese stresses ‘respect' for world leaders after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu calls him weak
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese stresses ‘respect' for world leaders after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu calls him weak

Sky News AU

time37 minutes ago

  • Sky News AU

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese stresses ‘respect' for world leaders after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu calls him weak

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has maintained he treats leaders with 'respect' after his Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke suggested Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu saw strength in blowing people up. Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has declared he treats leaders of other countries with respect, after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called him 'weak'. The Israel-Australia relationship has fallen to pieces in the weeks since the Albanese government decided to recognise Palestinian statehood ahead of a peace deal. This led Mr Netanyahu to calling Mr Albanese 'weak' and accusing him of abandoning Jewish Australians. Mr Albanese has downplayed personal offence, noting that Mr Netanyahu has made similar remarks about other leaders. 'I treat leaders of other countries with respect and I engage with them in a diplomatic way,' he told reporters at a press conference on Wednesday. 'I don't take these things personally… I engage with people diplomatically. He (Mr Netanyahu) has had similar things to say about other leaders. 'What I say is that Israel, of course, increasingly, there is global concern because people want to see an end to the cycle of violence that we have seen for far too long.' — Prime Minister of Israel (@IsraeliPM) August 19, 2025 The remarks were made after Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke made extraordinary comments about Mr Netanyahu, saying he conflated strength with violence. 'Strength is not measured by how many people you can blow up, or how many children you can leave hungry,' Mr Burke told ABC RN on Wednesday. 'Strength is much better measured by exactly what prime minister Anthony Albanese has done.' The Albanese government recently cancelled the visa of Israeli MP Simcha Rothman over concerns his presence could spark counter-protests in Australia. Israel then revoked visas of Australian diplomats to the Palestinian Authority in a move which Foreign Affairs Minister Penny Wong said was 'unjustified'. Mr Netanyahu further escalated the row in a letter to Mr Albanese, accusing Australia of 'pouring fuel on this antisemitic fire', urging action against antisemitism. 'It is not diplomacy, it is appeasement… antisemitism is a cancer. It spreads when leaders stay silent. It retreats when leaders act,' Mr Netanyahu said in the letter. It was an unprecedented letter from the highest level of the Israeli government to Australia, which has in the past been a strong ally of the democratic Jewish nation. Mr Netanyahu outlined several recent incidents of antisemitism that have plagued the Australian Jewish community. 'In June, vandals defaced a historic Melbourne synagogue with graffiti praising Iran and calling to 'Free Palestine',' Mr Netanyahu wrote. 'In July, arsonists targeted the East Melbourne Hebrew Congregation during Shabbat dinner, forcing twenty worshippers to flee for their lives.' Mr Netanyahu ended his personally-signed letter with a final comment that said: 'History will not forgive hesitation. It will honour action.' The letter comes after escalating diplomatic tensions between the Albanese government and Israel.

Ley blasts Albanese for placing Australia-US alliance in jeopardy over Israel ‘mismanagement'
Ley blasts Albanese for placing Australia-US alliance in jeopardy over Israel ‘mismanagement'

West Australian

time2 hours ago

  • West Australian

Ley blasts Albanese for placing Australia-US alliance in jeopardy over Israel ‘mismanagement'

Opposition leader Sussan Ley has accused Anthony Albanese of placing Australia's close alliance with the United States in jeopardy over the 'mismanagement' and 'deterioration' of the nation's relationship with Israel. It comes after Benjamin Netanyahu overnight, called Prime Minister Anthony Albanese a 'weak politician' who 'abandoned Australia's Jews' after Israeli politician Simcha Rothman's visa was revoked. Mr Rothman — a National Religious Party member in Netanyahu's coalition — had his visa revoked the day before he was due to fly to Australia on a speaking tour. It prompted Israel's foreign minister to cancel the visas of Australia's representatives to the Palestinian Authority. Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke has also since accused the Israeli Prime Minister of starving children, 'blowing up' civilians, and retaliating in anger to Australia's decision to recognise Palestinian statehood. Ms Ley on Wednesday said the PM's foreign policy 'failures' with Israel were 'becoming apparent' — adding 'respect goes both ways'. 'The series of events that we've seen in the relationship between Israel and Australia are regrettable, and that relationship has been and is being mismanaged,' she said. 'It's an enduring relationship. It dates back to 1947 when Australia was the first signatory for a UN resolution that created the State of Israel. 'Of course, along the way, there have been disagreements. There have been robust conversations. That's normal. But what we are seeing now is something different. 'We are seeing a relationship that has deteriorated and the consequences of that are not good, and they are spilling over into our relationship with the US, our most important ally.' The Opposition's condemnation also comes after it was revealed Netanyahu had sent a damning letter to Mr Albanese over his recognition commitment at the UN General Assembly in New York next month. A move Netanyahu claimed was 'it is not diplomacy, it is appeasement', according the letter obtained by Sky News and dated August 17. While Mr Burke said he hadn't seen the letter, he defended Australia's handling of its relationship with Israel. Speaking to RN Breakfast on Wednesday morning, he argued Mr Albanese had shown strength in standing up for Australia's right to make sovereign decisions and claimed Israel was 'lashing out'. 'Strength is not measured by how many people you can blow up, or how many children you can leave hungry,' Mr Burke said. 'Strength is much better measured by exactly what prime minister Anthony Albanese has done, which is when there's a decision that we know Israel won't like; he goes straight to Benjamin Netanyahu.' Ms Ley's Shadow Home Affairs Minister Andrew Hastie repeated the opposition's criticism of the visa cancellation and accused Mr Burke of being 'inconsistent' with cancelling visas. He labelled the saga a 'now at an all-time low' of the relationship with Australia's Middle East ally. 'The relationship with Israel now is at an all-time low, and that's largely because of the Albanese foreign policy incompetence from this government. I think the government's failed to recognise what this cancellation would mean,' he told ABC Radio National Breakfast. 'I'm sure (Mr Rothman) has said a whole range of things that I probably wouldn't agree with, but nonetheless, he's a member of the Knesset. 'And my point would be that Mr Burke, last year, allowed a number of people into this country who had expressed support for terrorism or terrorist organisation.'

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