
'Unjustified': PM-Trump talks push after tariff hike
Pressure is again mounting for Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to personally meet with Donald Trump amid fresh alarm over the US president's "unjustified" tariff hike on steel imports.
Mr Trump on Saturday announced plans to increase tariffs on foreign imports of steel from 25 to 50 per cent to "further secure the steel industry in the United States".
The latest decision could impact Australia's industry, which exported more than $414 million worth of iron and steel to the US in 2024.
Trade Minister Don Farrell says the tariffs are unjustified and not the act of a friend.
"They are an act of economic self-harm that will only hurt consumers and businesses who rely on free and fair trade," Mr Farrell said on Saturday.
"We will continue to engage and advocate strongly for the removal of the tariffs."
Opposition trade spokesman Kevin Hogan said the latest move was concerning for Australian jobs and the coalition expected the US to honour its obligations under both nations' free trade agreement.
"The Albanese government needs to double its efforts to protect our steel industry and local jobs for our steel workers," he said in a statement.
"This is why it is imperative that the Australian prime minister personally meets with President Trump ... to develop a personal rapport with the United States president and protect Australian industries."
The US imported 289 product categories in 2024, costing $US147 billion ($A229 billion), with nearly two-thirds of those aluminium and one-third steel, according to Census Bureau data from the US International Trade Commission.
The 25 per cent tariffs on steel and aluminium were among the earliest implemented following Mr Trump's return to the White House in January and came into effect in March.
Australia will continue to push for Mr Trump to drop his tariffs after a US federal court blocked his Liberation Day taxes on imported goods from going into effect.
Goods from Australia are subject to a 10 per cent baseline tariff, while all steel and aluminium imports to the US face 25 per cent tariffs before Mr Trump's latest announcement.
The New York-based Court of International Trade found the US president had overstepped his authority by imposing the tariffs.
The administration launched an appeal, decrying "unelected judges" should not decide how to address a "national emergency".
Labor has sought to temper expectations on whether it can land a deal with the US to remove the tariffs.
Pressure is again mounting for Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to personally meet with Donald Trump amid fresh alarm over the US president's "unjustified" tariff hike on steel imports.
Mr Trump on Saturday announced plans to increase tariffs on foreign imports of steel from 25 to 50 per cent to "further secure the steel industry in the United States".
The latest decision could impact Australia's industry, which exported more than $414 million worth of iron and steel to the US in 2024.
Trade Minister Don Farrell says the tariffs are unjustified and not the act of a friend.
"They are an act of economic self-harm that will only hurt consumers and businesses who rely on free and fair trade," Mr Farrell said on Saturday.
"We will continue to engage and advocate strongly for the removal of the tariffs."
Opposition trade spokesman Kevin Hogan said the latest move was concerning for Australian jobs and the coalition expected the US to honour its obligations under both nations' free trade agreement.
"The Albanese government needs to double its efforts to protect our steel industry and local jobs for our steel workers," he said in a statement.
"This is why it is imperative that the Australian prime minister personally meets with President Trump ... to develop a personal rapport with the United States president and protect Australian industries."
The US imported 289 product categories in 2024, costing $US147 billion ($A229 billion), with nearly two-thirds of those aluminium and one-third steel, according to Census Bureau data from the US International Trade Commission.
The 25 per cent tariffs on steel and aluminium were among the earliest implemented following Mr Trump's return to the White House in January and came into effect in March.
Australia will continue to push for Mr Trump to drop his tariffs after a US federal court blocked his Liberation Day taxes on imported goods from going into effect.
Goods from Australia are subject to a 10 per cent baseline tariff, while all steel and aluminium imports to the US face 25 per cent tariffs before Mr Trump's latest announcement.
The New York-based Court of International Trade found the US president had overstepped his authority by imposing the tariffs.
The administration launched an appeal, decrying "unelected judges" should not decide how to address a "national emergency".
Labor has sought to temper expectations on whether it can land a deal with the US to remove the tariffs.
Pressure is again mounting for Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to personally meet with Donald Trump amid fresh alarm over the US president's "unjustified" tariff hike on steel imports.
Mr Trump on Saturday announced plans to increase tariffs on foreign imports of steel from 25 to 50 per cent to "further secure the steel industry in the United States".
The latest decision could impact Australia's industry, which exported more than $414 million worth of iron and steel to the US in 2024.
Trade Minister Don Farrell says the tariffs are unjustified and not the act of a friend.
"They are an act of economic self-harm that will only hurt consumers and businesses who rely on free and fair trade," Mr Farrell said on Saturday.
"We will continue to engage and advocate strongly for the removal of the tariffs."
Opposition trade spokesman Kevin Hogan said the latest move was concerning for Australian jobs and the coalition expected the US to honour its obligations under both nations' free trade agreement.
"The Albanese government needs to double its efforts to protect our steel industry and local jobs for our steel workers," he said in a statement.
"This is why it is imperative that the Australian prime minister personally meets with President Trump ... to develop a personal rapport with the United States president and protect Australian industries."
The US imported 289 product categories in 2024, costing $US147 billion ($A229 billion), with nearly two-thirds of those aluminium and one-third steel, according to Census Bureau data from the US International Trade Commission.
The 25 per cent tariffs on steel and aluminium were among the earliest implemented following Mr Trump's return to the White House in January and came into effect in March.
Australia will continue to push for Mr Trump to drop his tariffs after a US federal court blocked his Liberation Day taxes on imported goods from going into effect.
Goods from Australia are subject to a 10 per cent baseline tariff, while all steel and aluminium imports to the US face 25 per cent tariffs before Mr Trump's latest announcement.
The New York-based Court of International Trade found the US president had overstepped his authority by imposing the tariffs.
The administration launched an appeal, decrying "unelected judges" should not decide how to address a "national emergency".
Labor has sought to temper expectations on whether it can land a deal with the US to remove the tariffs.
Pressure is again mounting for Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to personally meet with Donald Trump amid fresh alarm over the US president's "unjustified" tariff hike on steel imports.
Mr Trump on Saturday announced plans to increase tariffs on foreign imports of steel from 25 to 50 per cent to "further secure the steel industry in the United States".
The latest decision could impact Australia's industry, which exported more than $414 million worth of iron and steel to the US in 2024.
Trade Minister Don Farrell says the tariffs are unjustified and not the act of a friend.
"They are an act of economic self-harm that will only hurt consumers and businesses who rely on free and fair trade," Mr Farrell said on Saturday.
"We will continue to engage and advocate strongly for the removal of the tariffs."
Opposition trade spokesman Kevin Hogan said the latest move was concerning for Australian jobs and the coalition expected the US to honour its obligations under both nations' free trade agreement.
"The Albanese government needs to double its efforts to protect our steel industry and local jobs for our steel workers," he said in a statement.
"This is why it is imperative that the Australian prime minister personally meets with President Trump ... to develop a personal rapport with the United States president and protect Australian industries."
The US imported 289 product categories in 2024, costing $US147 billion ($A229 billion), with nearly two-thirds of those aluminium and one-third steel, according to Census Bureau data from the US International Trade Commission.
The 25 per cent tariffs on steel and aluminium were among the earliest implemented following Mr Trump's return to the White House in January and came into effect in March.
Australia will continue to push for Mr Trump to drop his tariffs after a US federal court blocked his Liberation Day taxes on imported goods from going into effect.
Goods from Australia are subject to a 10 per cent baseline tariff, while all steel and aluminium imports to the US face 25 per cent tariffs before Mr Trump's latest announcement.
The New York-based Court of International Trade found the US president had overstepped his authority by imposing the tariffs.
The administration launched an appeal, decrying "unelected judges" should not decide how to address a "national emergency".
Labor has sought to temper expectations on whether it can land a deal with the US to remove the tariffs.
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Addressing Asia's top security summit in Singapore on Saturday, US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth called on his nation's allies in the region to share the burden of deterrence by upgrading their own defences. "There's no reason to sugar coat it," he told the Shangri-La Dialogue. "The threat China poses is real, and it could be imminent." Responding to the remarks, Mr Albanese pointed to extra defence spending his government has already committed to. "We'll determine our defence policy, and we've invested just across (the next four years) an additional $10 billion in defence," he told reporters in Hobart on Sunday. "What we'll do is continue to provide for investing in our capability but also investing in our relationships in the region." Defence spending will rise to about 2.3 per cent of GDP within the decade, from the two per cent it currently hovers at. In Singapore at the summit, Defence Minister Richard Marles said the lift represented the "single biggest peacetime increase in defence expenditure in Australia's history". "So we are beginning this journey," he said. "We've got runs on the board." Mr Hegseth said Beijing's military action around Taiwan was "rehearsing for the real deal" in relation to an invasion of the island. Mr Albanese said Australia's position on Taiwan was "very clear" and included a bipartisan stance to support the status quo. China views Taiwan as its own territory, and slammed the US as the biggest "troublemaker for regional peace and stability". Australia will determine its own defence policy in the face of mounting US pressure on countries in the Indo-Pacific to ramp up spending against what the superpower says is a real and imminent threat from China. Addressing Asia's top security summit in Singapore on Saturday, US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth called on his nation's allies in the region to share the burden of deterrence by upgrading their own defences. "There's no reason to sugar coat it," he told the Shangri-La Dialogue. "The threat China poses is real, and it could be imminent." Responding to the remarks, Mr Albanese pointed to extra defence spending his government has already committed to. "We'll determine our defence policy, and we've invested just across (the next four years) an additional $10 billion in defence," he told reporters in Hobart on Sunday. "What we'll do is continue to provide for investing in our capability but also investing in our relationships in the region." Defence spending will rise to about 2.3 per cent of GDP within the decade, from the two per cent it currently hovers at. In Singapore at the summit, Defence Minister Richard Marles said the lift represented the "single biggest peacetime increase in defence expenditure in Australia's history". "So we are beginning this journey," he said. "We've got runs on the board." Mr Hegseth said Beijing's military action around Taiwan was "rehearsing for the real deal" in relation to an invasion of the island. Mr Albanese said Australia's position on Taiwan was "very clear" and included a bipartisan stance to support the status quo. China views Taiwan as its own territory, and slammed the US as the biggest "troublemaker for regional peace and stability". Australia will determine its own defence policy in the face of mounting US pressure on countries in the Indo-Pacific to ramp up spending against what the superpower says is a real and imminent threat from China. Addressing Asia's top security summit in Singapore on Saturday, US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth called on his nation's allies in the region to share the burden of deterrence by upgrading their own defences. "There's no reason to sugar coat it," he told the Shangri-La Dialogue. "The threat China poses is real, and it could be imminent." Responding to the remarks, Mr Albanese pointed to extra defence spending his government has already committed to. "We'll determine our defence policy, and we've invested just across (the next four years) an additional $10 billion in defence," he told reporters in Hobart on Sunday. "What we'll do is continue to provide for investing in our capability but also investing in our relationships in the region." Defence spending will rise to about 2.3 per cent of GDP within the decade, from the two per cent it currently hovers at. 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