Australia

PM’s diplomatic gauntlet continues despite Trump’s exit

18 June 2025 03:30 | News

The Prime Minister’s diplomatic show should continue even after the leaving the biggest star.

Anthony Arbanese’s highly anticipated plans to meet with Donald Trump on the last day of the G7 summit in Canada, scanned when the US President would leave the event early due to the increasing situation in the Middle East.

However, the Prime Minister cannot afford to focus on the loss while preparing to meet with other world leaders.

Germany’s chancellor Friedrich Merz, Japanese President Shigeru Ishiba, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, EU Commission President Ursula von Der Leyen and President of the Council of Europe Antonio Costa, Tuesday (Wednesday Aest) is planned to hold official meetings with Bay Albane.

Mr. Albania will also catch the French President Emmanuel Macron in the margins of the summit after being canceled due to a planned binary timing conflict.

Before Trump’s unexpected exit, the Prime Minister said he was looking forward to all his talks.

“I find these meetings very useful,” he said to journalists in Canada.

“I developed relationships with people in a straight way with them, and that makes a big difference.”

NATO boss Mark Rutte and Anthony Albanese say that the leaders personally make a big difference. (Lukas Coch/AAP Photos)

However, since global economies take into account the effect of the controversial tariffs of Mr. Trump, the absence of the US president is expected to haunt the rest of the summit.

Albania, who met with leaders, including South Korean President Lee Jae-Myung, was not the only politician to chat with the leader of the free world.

Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum hoped to talk to Mr. Trump first face to face, while Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi planned discussions with the US President.

Mr. Albania spokesman, given the increasing tensions between Iran and Israel, the decision was “understandable”, he said.

The Prime Minister said that he was “deeply worried ve and called on all parties to give priority to diplomacy and dialogue.

Opposition leader Sussan Ley acknowledged that Mr. Trump’s decision to leave was reasonable, but the government should not trust the President’s meeting with the President.

After the Pentagon started an investigation about the Nuclear submarine agreement with the United States and the UK, the Prime Minister was expected to defend AUKUS in his talks with Mr. Trump and try to negotiate a tariff exemption on the goods exported to the United States.

Australia’s exports to the United States continue to be hit with a 10 percent tariff and steel and aluminum products face 50 percent.


AAP News

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