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Australia

Albanese defends US ambassador after Trump clash

“We are not pre-empting this,” Albanese told reporters. He said that the US side put forward the changes they wanted in the agreement, but “we are not making announcements about AUKUS and AUKUS.” [its] structure” at a press conference.

During the public portion of yesterday’s meeting, US Secretary of the Navy John Phelan said there were still “uncertainties” regarding AUKUS that needed to be resolved.

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While Trump described these issues as “unimportant”, Albanese downplayed them overnight, instructing journalists: “Don’t look for something that isn’t there.”

Albanese said he spent about three hours with Trump on Monday (Tuesday AEDT), including a tour of the Oval Office and White House grounds and a private meeting with the US president.

He confirmed he had asked Trump to exempt Australia from the so-called 10 per cent reciprocal tariff, which he argued should be set at zero, but said there was no immediate response from the US. “Yes I did [seek tariff relief]”And we will continue to interact,” he said.

As part of the visit, Australia gave the Trumps an official gift: a model submarine for himself and jewelry for his wife, First Lady Melania Trump. Later, Albanese met with Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and had dinner with Secretary of State Marco Rubio at the Australian ambassador’s residence.

But the visit was nearly overshadowed when Trump was asked about Rudd’s old tweets before he became ambassador, calling Trump a “destructive” figure and a “traitor to the West.”

Trump laughed at Rudd and said, “Did you say that badly? I don’t like you either.” “And I probably never will.” Australian sources in the room said Rudd later apologized a second time and Trump assured him all was forgiven.

Back home, the Coalition called for Rudd to be sacked, while Opposition Leader Sussan Ley described his position as “indefensible”.

He blamed Rudd for the nine-month wait for a meeting between Trump and Albanese (even though the two had spoken by phone several times), saying: Sky News: “When the ambassador is the punchline of the joke and the prime minister is actually laughing at him, I think that tells us everything we need to know.”

In addition to the BHP lunch, Albanese also praised Rudd to dozens of American senators and members of Congress at a packed breakfast event with the Meeting of Friends of Australia.

Albanese takes a photo with members of the Friends of Australia Group.Credit: AAPIMAGE

Albanese with Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries in the House of Representatives on Tuesday.

Albanese with Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries in the House of Representatives on Tuesday.Credit: Getty Images

“If there is an ambassador who works harder [Capitol Hill]then please let me know because Kevin is doing his best and seems to know everything,” Albanese said.

About 40 people attended the event at Blair House, including the co-chairs of the Friends of Australia group – Republican congressman Michael McCaul and Democratic congressman Joe Courtney – and about two dozen other MPs, as well as several US senators from across the political aisle.

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McCaul downplayed Rudd’s encounter with Trump. “I’m glad you’re still gainfully employed,” he said.

Speaking about the AUKUS agreement, which is backed by congressional legislation, McCaul said Rudd “has been there every step of the way.”

“We have no greater ally and partner than Australia,” he said. With Australian-made weapons such as the Navy’s “Ghost Shark” autonomous underwater vehicle, the two countries have the ability to “flood the region” in the Indo-Pacific, McCaul said.

Rudd then accompanied Albanese to meetings in the US Congress, including Hakeem Jeffries, the leader of the Democrats in the House of Representatives, and senior members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, including Republican committee chairman Jim Risch and the committee’s top Democrat, Jeanne Shaheen.

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