Australia news and politics live: Anthony Albanese hints at Donald Trump meeting on Quad sidelines

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Key Events
‘Trump needs an Australian he likes’: Fresh blow for Rudd
Former Prime Minister and Australian Ambassador to the United States Kevin Rudd has copped a fresh blow, with a leading US pollster suggesting US President Donald Trump doesn’t like Kevin 07.
“I think he doesn’t like the current ambassador, and that’s one of the biggest issues,” Brent Buchanan told Sky News from the US on Monday.
“Donald Trump needs to find an Australian that he likes – or Australia needs to find an Australian that Donald Trump likes and let that person take point – because so much with Donald Trump is personal relationships.”
Mr Buchanan suggested Mr Rudd’s expertise on China still held merit with the US Congress, but said the right “deal maker” was needed to deal with the US President.
Albanese hints at Trump meeting in line with Quad
Anthony Albanese has hinted at a meeting with US President Donald Trump on the sidelines of the Quad leaders meeting if that comes before the Prime Minister’s planned trip to the US for high-level UN meetings in September.
The Prime Minister said the timing of the Quad meeting was being finalised with the leaders of the US, Japan and India, as well as a date to meet Mr Trump.
“I’d be prepared, of course, to meet with President Trump when a suitable time can be organised,” he told ABC TV.
“I think where the meeting takes place is less important than what comes out of the meeting.”
Foreign Minister Penny Wong is travelling to Washington this week to meet ministerial counterparts from the Quad countries, which are focused on peace and stability in the Indo-Pacific region.
‘Finally matures’: Keating celebrates super milestone
Former Prime Minister Paul Keating has issued a statement to celebrate a superannuation milestone, saying on Tuesday the system “finally matures”.
“Tomorrow, thirty-four years after I nominated a 12 per cent wage equivalent as the appropriate level of compulsory contribution into superannuation, the system finally matures,” he wrote in a statement.
“This means that every young person joining the workforce this year will begin and remain at 12 per cent of superannuation contributions throughout their entire working life.
“This level of contributions and compound earnings will guarantee personal super accumulations in excess of $3m at retirement, reducing the call by the age pension on the Australian budget to 2 per cent of GDP in the 2050s.”
Mr Keating said superannuation had become a “community standard” like Medicare, “binding the whole population as a national economic family, with each person having a place.”
Canada rescinds digital services tax after Trump cuts trade talks
Canada has walked back on its digital services tax “in anticipation” of a mutually beneficial comprehensive trade arrangement with the United States, Ottawa announced Sunday night, just one day before the first tax payments were due.
The move comes after US President Donald Trump announced over the weekend that he will be “terminating ALL discussions on Trade with Canada” in response to Ottawa’s decision to impose a digital services tax on American tech firms.
“Today’s announcement will support a resumption of negotiations toward the July 21, 2025, timeline set out at this month’s G7 Leaders’ Summit in Kananaskis,” Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said in the statement.
The first payments from Canada’s digital services tax, which was enacted last year and applies retroactively to 2022, were initially set to be collected on Monday.
Bowen says Australia is bidding against Türkiye to host COP31 summit
Energy Minister Chris Bowen says Australia is bidding against Türkiye to host the COP31 climate change summit in partnership with the Pacific in 2026.
The Conference of the Parties is a global summit that sees global leaders come together to discuss climate change matters and solutions.
Mr Bowen says Australia has secured the support of Western Europe to host the summit, which is likely to be held in Adelaide if Australia is to be successful.
He said that Türkiye has suggested it will continue with its bid to host.
“We’ve always been respectful of Türkiye’s bid. I’ve been engaging my Turkish counterpart,” Mr Bowen said while speaking at Parliament House.
“The way these things work is that the Western Europe and others group is the group which chooses the candidate. We have overwhelming support in that group.”
Energy Minister announces gas market review
Energy Minister Chris Bowen has announced a new review into gas market regulations, which will take a “comprehensive and methodical look at key measures” introduced by previous governments on energy supply and prices.
The review follows the latest gas inquiry report from the ACCC, which the government said confirms that “short term gas supply is sufficient” but flagged “the need for further investment in the long term”.
“Gas has an important role to play in our energy system as we transition towards 82 per cent renewables. Unlike coal, gas power generators can be turned on and off in a couple of minutes – providing the ultimate backstop in our energy grid,” Mr Bowen said.
“It’s critical that we use this review to get the settings right in our gas market, ensuring we are securing affordable Australian gas for Australian use, while remaining a reliable energy exporter and delivering lasting energy security in our region.”
Millions to benefit from new cost-of-living measures: Albo
A minimum wage hike, longer paid leave for parents of 24 weeks and a $10,000 incentive for apprentice tradies in house construction are among the cost-of-living measures due to kick into effect on July 1.
A further $150 in energy bill relief for households and about one million small businesses, and a government subsidy covering about 30 per cent of the cost of installing a battery system alongside solar energy are among a raft of new policies offering hip pocket relief to Australians.
Spruiking the new grant for tradies at the Canberra Institute for Technology on Monday, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said it would help boost the supply of homes critical for dealing with housing affordability.
“This $10,000 incentive that begins tomorrow with $2,000 cash payments will make a difference going forward … in sending out that message that the government values your decision if you choose to go into construction,” he said.
Albanese reshuffles media team post-election
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is overhauling his communications team following the May 3 federal election and the departure of his senior press secretary, Katharine Murphy.
Ms Murphy, the former Guardian Australia political editor, had been a key figure in the PM’s media strategy, particularly during the election campaign, where she managed the travelling media pack and worked closely with Mr Albanese’s head of communications, Fiona Sugden.
As part of the reshuffle, two new deputy press secretaries will join Sugden’s team. Josh Lloyd, a seasoned press secretary and former union organiser, and Adam Gartrell, a former Sydney Morning Herald journalist who recently served as deputy chief of staff to Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke, have both been tapped for the roles.
The move signals a recalibration of the Prime Minister’s media strategy heading into a pivotal period of government, with new voices now helping to shape how Mr Albanese communicates with the public and press.
The great budget blowout: Why deficits are surging worldwide
Last year, America ran a budget deficit of 7 per cent of GDP. It may soon be even bigger.
President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act, now working its way through Congress, permanently extends tax cuts introduced in 2017, offers more to hospitality workers and old folks, and boosts payments to poor children.
The proposed legislation amounts to trillions of dollars of extra borrowing over the next decade.
Mr Trump’s showmanship attracts attention, but America is not alone. Governments across the rich world are increasingly profligate.
This year, France will run a deficit worth 6 per cent of GDP; Britain’s will be only a little smaller.
The German government will borrow the equivalent of 3 per cent of GDP. Canada’s budget balance is also moving into the red.
Bupa fined $35M for misleading thousands of Aussies
Private health insurer Bupa has been fined $35m after conceding it engaged in misleading or deceptive conduct to talk more than 4000 Australians out of claiming hospital treatments.
The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission said in a statement on Monday that Bupa admitted to the breaches after telling customers they were not entitled to private health insurance benefits for their claims, even though they were entitled to make a claim.
This left some customers thousands of dollars out of pocket for medical treatments they had to pay for when Bupa should have paid at least part of the bill.
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