Trumpâs 25 percent tariffs on aluminum and steel have caused a political and media storm in Australia.
Coalition Shadow Trade Minister Kevin Hogan says Australia should leverage its vast critical mineral stores to continue negotiation with the Trump administration over tariff exemptions.
Hogan said Australia has more leverage to negotiate with America compared to a few years ago.
âWe have the $800 million AUKUS cheque that [Defence Minister] Richard Marles just went over and threw on the table as part of the deal with AUKUS,â he added. âSo we actually believe we have more leverage points with America now than when we got the exemption a few years ago.â
The MPâs comments come after executive director of the Australian Institute for Progress, Graham Young, made the suggestion.
These minerals are in high demand globally and are used in a range of modern technologies from magnets, EVs, smartphones, and fighter jets.
Australian Ambassador to the U.S. Kevin Rudd has reportedly attempted to use critical minerals in talks with U.S. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, but to no avail.
But Shadow Minister Hogan insists Albanese get on a plane and âmeet the leader of America.â
âWe think thereâs some great things that we can say and get some leverage on, but we think itâs very important that that person to person, leader to leader, thatâs how Trump operates, and itâs very disappointing that our leader hasnât found the will to go over and do that,â he said.
To Retaliate or Not?
Meanwhile, Opposition Leader Peter Dutton said Australia should not consider retaliation against the United States, like Canada or the European Union.
Dutton said he was more concerned about a second round of tariffs and said there were âworrying signsâ at the moment.
âIf the government doesnât get its skates on, weâre going to have further tariffs applied to Australia,â Dutton told reporters on the Central Coast, New South Wales.
Dutton pointed out the Coalition had been able to negotiate with the previous Trump administrationâabout eight months laterâand continued his criticism of Prime Minister Anthony Albanese for not being able to get through to the U.S. president for a call.
âThis prime minister canât even get a phone call. And I donât agree with what President Trump has done at all. We [the Liberal government] actually rolled our sleeves up. We negotiated with the Trump administration, and we got an exemption,â Dutton said.
âThe U.S. doesnât have free trade. We have stupid trade. The entire world is ripping us off,â Trump posted to Truth Social on March 13.
Former Labor Minister Bill Shorten, now vice-chancellor at the University of Canberra, suggested Australia needs to push back, criticising Trump for leading the âfree world as if itâs a reality TV show.â
âThis is not the argument that Australia wants to be in, but Iâm confident this government, and I think all reasonable Australians, will say at a certain point, âYou push us, we push you.ââ
Minister Says US Trade Still Small Compared to China
Meanwhile, Labor Trade Minister Don Farrell said the United States had done a âgreat act of self harmâ and noted the scale of Australiaâs trade with China.
However, he cautioned about the next round of tariffs from April 1, and said Australia would be talking with American counterparts to âtry and convince them that they are heading in the wrong direction.â
âWell, we sell a lot of agricultural products to the United States. We sell a lot of pharmaceutical products to the United States. Thereâs $30 billion worth of products that we sell to the United States,â he said.
âWe donât want any of those products that havenât yet been subject to the tariff to be subject to the tariff. And thatâs the argument that weâre putting to the United States, and thatâs the argument we will continue to put to the United States.â
Original News Source Link â Epoch Times
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