9 July 2025

PM hasn't given up on escaping US tariffs but still can't get a meeting with Trump

| By Chris Johnson
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Hon Anthony Albanese MP, Prime Minister of Australia

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese heads to China soon, but that meeting with US President Donald Trump remains elusive. Photo: Thomas Lucraft.

Anthony Albanese isn’t giving up on trying to convince the United States to withdraw tariffs on Australian imports, but the Coalition says the Prime Minister won’t be able to do much without meeting US President Donald Trump face-to-face.

Australia has been hit with a baseline 10 per cent tariff on most goods, but a 50 per cent tariff on Australian steel and aluminium.

Other nations have been threatened with very high tariffs, but exactly when those higher ones are going to kick in remains uncertain.

There is also confusion over a newly-flagged 200 per cent tariff on pharmaceuticals, with the Federal Government scrambling to find out if and how it might apply to Australia.

President Trump has written to a number of world leaders, including Japan and South Korea, to say their baseline tariffs could be 25 per cent or more unless they make special trade deals with the US.

The so-called “reciprocal tariffs” were meant to start on Wednesday (9 July) but the Trump administration is now saying they will be imposed from 1 August.

Asked on Tuesday if he was concerned Australia might be landed with a higher tariff rate, Mr Albanese said he wasn’t.

“No, because we’re not increasing tariffs,” the Prime Minister said.

“… tariffs are a penalty on the country that is imposing them, because what they require is for goods to be purchased with a tax on top.

“And the US has made that decision. Australia has a tariff rate of 10 per cent, which is at least as low as any country in the world.

“No country has a better deal than Australia.”

But the PM is still hoping to get that 10 per cent reduced to nothing.

READ ALSO No cut to interest rates this month, as RBA defies expectations in a split decision

“We’ll continue to put our case that tariffs are an act of economic self-harm and that we should be entitled to reciprocal tariffs, which is zero,” he said.

“We’ll continue to put that case, but the US administration has a view that they’re engaged with other countries on as well.

“It varies, the tariff, from country to country, but no country has secured an exemption from the US administration.”

Asked directly if he had given up on negotiating the tariffs lower than 10 per cent, the Prime Minister simply said “no”.

Opposition Leader Sussan Ley said the PM was up against it if he couldn’t even secure a meeting with the US President.

“It’s very difficult for the Australian Government to negotiate anything if Prime Minister Anthony Albanese can’t be in the room and get a meeting with Donald Trump,” she said.

“So unfortunately, 245 days after the President became the President, we still don’t see that meeting and we don’t have it scheduled.

“And what that underlines is that whenever there’s any discussions about tariffs, we unfortunately are not there, able to plead our case.

“And I note the changes in some tariffs to some countries today. I care about Australia. I want our tariffs on steel to be removed and I note that in the UK, they were able to get a deal on steel, which we haven’t been able to because we’re not in the room.

“So I would urge that the Prime Minister do everything possible to achieve that meeting, to build that relationship.”

READ ALSO PM says AI will help economy, while China says it could help trade agreement

Ms Ley agreed, however, that Mr Albanese’s impending visit to China was in Australia’s interests.

“It is an important visit and it should underline the respectful relationship that we need to have with China,” the Opposition Leader said.

“And it should underscore the important people-to-people links that have built our country with Chinese Australians very much there … and it should also underline that that respect is a two-way street and we expect respect to come both ways.”

Mr Albanese said the focus of his China trip, starting on Saturday, would be shoring up jobs for Australia.

“China’s an important trading partner for Australia. Twenty-five per cent of our exports go to China,” he said.

“What that means is jobs and one of the things that my government prioritises is jobs.”

The PM wouldn’t be drawn on commentary that China wants to expand its free trade agreement with Australia to include artificial intelligence and digital technologies.

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It seems to have escaped the attention of the anti-Trumpers that many countries have had high tariffs against the US for years. The US was blocked from exporting many major items (eg cars). So it is a new ballgame now under Trump. In Australia’s case it wasn’t a smooth set of arrangements for aluminium and steel negotiated in the Turnbull/ScoMo period (post 2019), nor have we been squeaky clean on beef.

You should move to America where you can really enjoy Trump’s taking economy.

Again from the real world Trump is trying to return America’s 1950s manufacturing base while his lunch is being eaten by the Chinese who he has gifted global trade dominance. I saw it described as like the Chicago Bulls bringing back Jordan, Pipen and Rodman in 2025 and trying to win the NBA.

Despite all the threat and carry on Trump has only signed two minor deals and why? Because he’s an incompetent, corrupt and untrustworthy clown.

Trump literally got the Canadians to make concessions in their most recent talks, got bored or wasn’t kowtowed too enough who knows but he blew it all up, slapped a 35% tariff on the Canadians and walked away. Idiotic.

Canada is now busily doing a deal with the EU and everyone was reminded yet again that Trump’s word is meaningless.

The new ballgame is that no country is rushing to sign bad, one sided trade trade deals with the unreliable, erratic an untrustworthy Trump and the damage he’s caused the US will not be undone anytime soon.

The reality is that Labor want to continue the nice free loading we have had relying on the US for our defence. There are now calls by Trump for NATO to go up from 2% of GDP to 5% on their defence outlays. The US has carried that heavy load since WW2. Tariffs will have some but not major impact on us. When Albanese meets Trump he will be told to lift Defence expenditure or else. The US will not be fooled by Labor’s shell pea game that part-time Minister Richard Mumbles plays. We know the socialist playbook. During the Rudd-Gillard-Rudd Labor years the Defence Minister laughed at the major cuts he made.

“The reality is that Labor want to continue the nice free loading we have had relying on the US for our defence. “

Two words for this nonsense “Pine Gap”.

And I hate to break it to you but in the real world the adults running countries that aren’t America don’t care what he threatens or demands…not only because of the TACO Trump reputation that he richly deserves…not only because of the incompetent chancers he’s surrounded himself with (he’s just made the former Ashfield Councillor and social media clown Nick Adams Malaysian Ambassador…what was Russell Coight unavailable) but Trump himself has demonstrated repeatedly that his word is meaningless.

Defence spending has risen under the current Labor government.

Every time you mention adults and the real world i think about your cubby house.

I don’t see how you living in a fantasy world is at all relevant to this thread Penfold.

PS. I don’t think about you at all.

HiddenDragon10:32 pm 09 Jul 25

With the Trump administration increasingly treating free trade agreements with various countries, including Australia, as a la carte menus, we should do likewise and look hard at provisions of our FTA which have not worked out as well as we might have liked.

Agree with this, especially as Trump has shown that does not care what deals have been signed and that any deal made with the US with him as President is entirely transactional, about him personally and at the mercy of his merest whim.

America became the most powerful country post war because they were a stable democracy with strong laws, a good place to do business with and a safe place to park money. In a very short period of time Trump has undo all of that…he thinks to America’s benefit but he, MAGA and the rest of the US caught up in his nonsense will soon have it confirmed that Trump is a spectacular idiot.

Trump working for “big Pharma” as well as quashing the Epstein case as well as starting a war with Iran….MAGA may be finally starting to see the con…they certainly will after the mid-terms when the huge wealth transfer from poor to rich really gets under way.

Meanwhile like most countries in the world Australia is sensibly refusing not to be bullied, there is no way they can let the clueless Donald dictate domestic policy. Especially when any deal signed with Trump is basically worthless because he has shown he will rip it up on a whim.

Michael Pless2:09 pm 09 Jul 25

I think you are correct. I’m just waiting for AUKUS to be torn up – probably after Australia gives the next payment for the submarines – purely because Biden signed the deal originally. And no money we give to America will be coming back when Trump welches on the deal – something he has prior for. A better plan would be to use that money develop more rapidly our anti-submarine drone technology to the point where it makes submarines essentially obsolete, and then tell Trump he can keep his outmoded war materiel. And PM Albanese needs to stop trying to get an audience with Trump – Trump will just delight in giving him the runaround. Like Canada, we need to stand up on our own two legs and forge our own way forward.

Agree with all that but I think Albo in seeking an audience is just him being diplomatic. Trump doesn’t care about Australia, he’s purely transactional and about his own ego not the interests of America in supporting their allies and certainly not those of Australia which he couldn’t point to on a map otherwise.

I see most world leaders are treating Trump politely, ignoring his BS and working around him with other countries, and I suspect Australia is doing the same.

Americans haven’t realised yet how much the harm Trump has done to their international standing and how much that will hurt them but it’s not just trade, tourism is also down $8.5bn, by the time Americans do realise the damage it will be significant and permanent.

Capital Retro3:36 pm 09 Jul 25

I hope you have a telescopic sight on your self-loading catapult, Michael

Trump does the opposite of be bullied by big pharma. He hates big pharma – it’s objectively clear.

Capital normally I get your “jokes” and think “‘How sad” and move but this one is a genuine “What?”.

“Trump does the opposite of be bullied by big pharma. He hates big pharma – it’s objectively clear.”

He’s literally attacking the Australian PBS at the behest of “big pharma”, but who’d expect a Trump supporter to have any sort of principle.

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