logo
Anthony Albanese has no ‘relationship' with Donald Trump

Anthony Albanese has no ‘relationship' with Donald Trump

Sky News AU21-07-2025
Liberal Senator Dave Sharma has praised the 'strong' US-Australia relationship.
Mr Sharma told Sky News Australia that US President Donald Trump runs a 'personalised' style of administration.
'So, the relationship with the leader is all-important in that sort of government, and Anthony Albanese simply does not have a relationship with Donald Trump,' he said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

White House reveals new details of Trump's tariff plan
White House reveals new details of Trump's tariff plan

Sky News AU

time15 minutes ago

  • Sky News AU

White House reveals new details of Trump's tariff plan

The White House has revealed details of US President Donald Trump's new tariff plan. The US Labor Department's July jobs report has warning signs about how the Trump administration's trade policy is impacting the market. The trump administration's new tariff plan will take effect August 7 and will mark a dramatic shift in modern era US trade policy. The White House is ushering in a new trade era which impacts every country with which the US exchanges goods and services. The Trump economic team argues the trade policy protects American jobs and has been generating investment in the US economy.

Spit hoods return to the NT as chief minister sprays critics as 'offender apologists'
Spit hoods return to the NT as chief minister sprays critics as 'offender apologists'

ABC News

time15 minutes ago

  • ABC News

Spit hoods return to the NT as chief minister sprays critics as 'offender apologists'

The Royal Darwin Show usually makes headlines for its prize-winning pumpkins and scones, not setting the political agenda in the Top End of Australia. But when the show became a crime scene on Saturday night, that's exactly what transpired, after a 15-year-old boy was allegedly stabbed by another 15-year-old boy and left in a serious condition. Cue the Northern Territory government's political rhetoric on social media: It would make "no apologies" for toughening up a "broken system" by changing the Youth Justice Act. Chief Minister Lia Finocchiaro led the charge by saying she expected the "usual offender apologists to criticise our efforts". "They should look Territorians in the eye and say that kids witnessing senseless violence at a family show is okay," she wrote on social media. The statement laid out the blueprint for the week ahead — you're with us, or you're against us. By the end of the week, the government had rolled out its planned changes, including bringing back spit hoods in youth detention settings and removing the principle of detention as a last resort. Both are measures the royal commission into youth detention in the Northern Territory, sparked by a 2016 Four Corners investigation, explicitly recommended against. On social media and radio text lines, voters commended the government's tough stance. On the other side of the debate, there were condemnations of the changes — from health and justice advocacy groups, not-for-profit organisations and Aboriginal peak bodies — as a "catastrophic step backwards" for young First Nations people. The new chief executive of the North Australian Aboriginal Justice Agency, Ben Grimes, warned of a flood of youths into detention before the system was properly bolstered to deal with the influx. "It's sort of like saying you're going to increase a school population by a thousand children, but not hiring any more teachers, building any more rooms or providing any more resources," he said. So-called "offender apologists" were offered limited airtime within parliament house. Ms Finocchiaro told a group of NT paediatricians who had written to her expressing "deep concern" over this week's changes that they were wasting their time. "I will do my job, which is to run the NT, and they can do their job, which is to look after sick children," she said. The chief also sledged Opposition Leader Selena Uibo in parliament, saying while her party did not win the election, "she wins the award for being the biggest gutter trash politician in the chamber". And an all-out "personal" attack on NT Coroner Elisabeth Armitage by Prevention of Domestic Violence Minister Robyn Cahill drew the ire of the sector. Eight months after a landmark inquiry into four murdered women, the minister's official response accused the coroner of lacking humility and delivering "uninspiring" recommendations. Alarmed lawyers and advocates returned serve, accusing the minister of "undermining" Judge Armitage's judicial role. Deputy Opposition Leader Chansey Paech also weighed in, saying Territorians expected accountability and action from the Country Liberal Party (CLP) government. "What they're getting from the CLP is blame-shifting, bullying and finger-pointing," he said. "The CLP government has no credible plan to make our communities safer, no strategy to improve the justice system and no willingness to accept responsibility — so instead, they attack the coroner." The NT government won last year's territory election with a massive landslide, and it is continuing to deliver on the tough-on-crime law changes it promised, no matter the concern or criticism. "This Youth Justice Legislation Amendment Bill … is part of our election commitments," Ms Finocchiaro said this week. "It is a part of our plan to continue to reduce crime across the Northern Territory." And, according to Ms Finocchiaro, the changes are something that have won the applause of "tens of thousands of Territorians who agree with us". She may well be right. But ignoring or undermining experts and judicial officials may also come with great risk. Earlier this week, the ABC revealed more than 400 youths had been taken into custody at police watch houses during the first six months of the government's time in power. The laws passed this week will likely see that number climb even higher — but anyone who raises that point is likely to be shot down as an "apologist" by a government hell-bent on pursuing its agenda.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store