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Australia politics live: Trump praises Albanese at dinner on Apec sidelines; Bowen predicts lower electricity prices | Australia news

Albanese dines with Trump in South Korea

More now on Anthony Albanese and Donald Trump’s dinner on the Apec sidelines in Gyeongju last night.

The US president told reporters that the pair “had a great meeting a week ago”, the ABC reports, referring to their Washington meeting.

Trump continued:

You’ve done a fantastic job and we’re working together on rare earths, but we’re working on a lot of things together, and it’s all working out very well.

Albanese with Singapore’s prime minister, Lawrence Wong, Donald Trump, and South Korean president, Lee Jae Myung in Gyeongju, South Korea. Photograph: Mark Schiefelbein/AP

The main event of the summit was Trump negotiating a trade deal with South Korea, but it was also a chance for Albanese to continue the diplomatic whirlwind of recent weeks that has seen him travel to the US (twice), UK, UAE, Malaysia and now South Korea.

I’m working with leaders from across the globe to get things done for Australia.

Here at APEC we have a seat at the table – and we use it to back Australian jobs, Australian businesses and to create new opportunities for our exporters and investors.

Because what happens in the… pic.twitter.com/a6mSReiPoE

— Anthony Albanese (@AlboMP) October 29, 2025

Writing on X, Albanese said:

I’m working with leaders from across the globe to get things done for Australia.

Here at APEC we have a seat at the table – and we use it to back Australian jobs, Australian businesses and to create new opportunities for our exporters and investors.

Because what happens in the world matters to Australia. Thank you for the warm welcome to South Korea, President Lee Jae Myung.

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Key events

Following on from last post …

Watt is facing a lot of questions about how the new act would define a project that has an “unacceptable” impact on the environment which would trigger an immediate refusal. Along with that comes another power in the draft act which would allow the minister to override some environmental rules if a project is in the national interest.

Watt tells RN Breakfast an unacceptable impact would be something like a project wanting to mine under Uluru or clear a habitat that would “drive a species to extinction”.

On the issue around national interest, Watt says the legislation gives a “flavour” of what that might look like – and emphasises it was an explicit recommendation of Graeme Samuel.

Governments of the day should, in very rare circumstances, have the ability when something is in the national interest to approve a project proceeding, even if it doesn’t meet the usual environmental standards. What we’ve said in the bill is to try to give a flavour of the types of projects that we’re talking about would be most likely defence or security projects, actions that may be undertaken in responding to a natural disaster. We have made the point that that should be rarely used, that there’s got to be transparency with the minister of the day issuing a statement of reasons justifying why they’ve done that. And just to be clear, that decision to approve a project in the national interest would occur after a full assessment was done.

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