Australia election 2025 live: Dutton claims he would have won a better tariff deal from Trump; Keating says US policy a ‘blitzkrieg on globalisation’ | Australia news

by oqtey
Australia election 2025 live: Dutton claims he would have won a better tariff deal from Trump; Keating says US policy a ‘blitzkrieg on globalisation’ | Australia news

Albanese says ‘no one has got a better deal’ than Australia in Trump’s tariff regime

Anthony Albanese emphasises that “no one has got a better deal” than Australia, and diplomats and officials are continuing to engage with the administration:

We have made very strong representations. Ministers, our ambassador, people in the embassy, people at departmental level, we’ve used every asset at our disposal.

But what it does mean – it’s a bit like what I was saying yesterday. Steel and aluminium, there’s not more steel and aluminium being produced in the United States today than there was in February.

The PM says that his understanding is that these 10% tariffs will be across the board.

Australia and the United Kingdom were in negotiations, I’m not sure about other countries, but I know that we were and that was under consideration … So our understanding is that it applies across the board.

He says again the best response is to buy Australian, and Labor will continue to promote Australian products (like Bundaberg ginger beer which he says he had at the Bundaberg factory when he was up campaigning in Queensland earlier this week).

Anthony Albanese speaks alongside foreign minister Penny Wong and trade minister Don Farrell in Melbourne. Photograph: Lukas Coch/AAP
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Key events

Peter Dutton is speaking to media again from Perth, and he’s pushing hard on mining (specifically that the coalition heavily supports the mining industry).

Dutton has accused Labor of delaying a decision on the extension of the North West shelf gas project in WA.

I think what it says to everybody in WA who is reliant on or connected with this sector, with this incredible mining sector, that you can’t trust Mr Albanese, and he certainly can’t trust a minority labor greens government.

The first question to Dutton goes to whether a Coalition government would repeal the same job, same pay IR laws that the Labor government has put in.

Dutton skirts the question and goes straight to what he’s said previously, that he’ll deregister the construction union, the CFMEU, which is currently under administration.

The big difference on industrial relations policy at the next election between us and the Labor Party will be that we’re going to deregister the CFMEU. The CFMEU would be a disaster for the Pilbara. The CFMEU would be a disaster across every mining site.

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