6 April 2025

How US tariffs could be Albo's trump card

| Ian Bushnell
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Hon Peter Dutton MP

Opposition Leader Peter Dutton opposes Trump’s tariffs, but his echoing of some of the US President’s other pronouncements may come back to haunt him. Photo: Michelle Kroll.

Donald Trump’s tariff edicts may be bad news for the world’s exporters and the markets, but his timing during Australia’s election campaign could be crucial to the government not just hanging on but retaining its majority.

Peter Dutton’s eager echoing of Trump’s pronouncements on government waste, the public sector and working from home have already put the frighteners on a lot of voters, and while he has boasted about standing up to the dealmaker-in-chief, by association, he has left himself vulnerable.

If voters aren’t worried about public servants losing their jobs, then the sight of their superannuation going up in flames as share markets tank will terrify them.

Dutton, like just about everybody else, is opposed to tariffs and, of course, will fight in the nation’s interest to oppose them or find a way to be exempted, but having already sounded off about cutting government, ‘woke’ indoctrination in our schools and unis, and the partisan ABC in tones that are undoubtedly Trumpian, it will be a challenge for voters to discern that the hard man of the right has a nuanced position.

For Labor, it is a golden opportunity to tar Dutton with the Trump brush at a time when the world, including Australia, has the jitters.

READ ALSO Record number of polling stations overseas

If Trump is a tariff vandal upending the global order, what credibility do his other fiats have?

Australians, slapped awake by watching their super balances smoking, might rightly deduce we don’t need any of it here.

Expect Labor to hammer this point in the weeks to come, along with the Mediscare campaign, and argue that amid the current turmoil, stability and continuity are vital. No time for changing horses. No time for risks and unknown quantities.

Many Liberals, already disheartened by Dutton’s surprisingly lacklustre start to the campaign and polls showing a drift back to Labor, will be urging a less hairy chested response to Trump’s tariffs, a toning down of his war on woke and an intensified focus on cost of living issues aimed at the mortgage belt suburbs, where the government is vulnerable: interest rates, grocery prices, energy and fuel bills.

Tone will be important.

Albo will aim to sound trustworthy, in charge and competent, a safe pair of hands in turbulent times, if he can avoid falling off stages and not sound like his handlers have slipped sedatives into his morning cuppa.

The Libs will continue to paint him as weak, something made easier by a term in which Albo sought to be the voice of reason but checked his passion at the door.

But in campaign mode, he will look to harden his rhetoric.

Can Dutton switch from the Trumpesque hyperbole and the negative bent of opposition to someone sounding like a prime minister who’s not going to add to the upset we are experiencing?

At the weekend, he showed he is still a head kicker, booting a football accidentally into a camera operator. The campaign trail can be a perilous place.

But he can also be direct, forthright and clear.

READ ALSO Campaign hijacked by tariffs, but no one seems to mind

For many, it will be a matter of perception. Where some may be put off by Dutton’s manner, others will see strength. Where some prefer Albo’s restraint and nuance, others will see weakness.

For both Labor and Liberal, it will be the task to manage and manipulate those perceptions.

There are clear policy differences, but the focus is tightening to bread and butter issues. Albanese isn’t mentioning climate change much, and I expect Dutton will pull back on peripheral matters.

But it could be too late. Trump is now a truly scary figure, and any association with him is likely to be a liability.

As appears to be the case in Canada, Trump could be the deciding factor in Australia.

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My favourite bit of Australian politics of the week is the large number of LNP MPs who won’t entertain a nuclear reactor in their electorate.

Which is bad enough for Dopey Dutton but worse is the LNP QLD government who are actually responsible for energy in their state and have clearly looked the numbers don’t want a bar of Dud’s culture wars thought bubble, they have said no to nuclear reactors in QLD.

There’s a reason that the LNP have largely gone silent on Dutton’s dud nuclear plan, because it’s DOA.

A vote for Dutton is a vote for no energy plan and a return to LNP government stagnation in energy investment. A vote for Dutton is a vote for higher energy prices.

Capital Retro12:03 pm 07 Apr 25

Congratulations, Ian.
You are the first person I’ve heard of that has convened an on-line group therapy session for people with Trump Derangement Syndrome.
Is the NDIS funding it?

What’s deranged is ignoring that Trump has pardoned criminals who committed violent crimes, allowed his minion to sack 10s of thousands of veterans leaving other vets without services, cancelled childhood cancer & Alzheimer’s research and tanked the American economy almost certainly guaranteeing recession with his idiotic trade policies.

Capital Retro2:38 pm 07 Apr 25

Welcome to the group therapy session, Seano.

Once again Capital unable to defend the indefensible, hardly surprising that I knew you wouldn’t have an adult response to my comment.

Capital Retro5:17 pm 07 Apr 25

I am trying to humour you, Seano.

As for superannuation, with the Future Fund being directed to make investments in renewable projects rather than higher profit making ones, returns will naturally be lower.

Capital Retro12:00 pm 07 Apr 25

They have a huge amount of Tesla shares too, ha ha.

None of that is true.

Yes CR, almost half a billion in Tesla shares on December 31. Oops.

Australians are smart enough to distinguish between Trump’s gutting departments and Dutton’s plan to remove the ridiculous extra 41,000 APS that Labor has put on to reward the unions.

Apparently you can’t.

Stephen Saunders9:12 am 07 Apr 25

The minute Trump targeted the “independent” researchers at ANU, I was inclined to call the election for Labor. They can’t run solely on their dismal record, they are much better off, campaigning on Trump derangement.

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