Australian news and politics live: Marles says Australia to discuss defence spend with US but it’s our call

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Peta Rasdien
The Nightly
Richard Marles said Australia was willing to discuss military spending with the US but would be making its own decisions.
Richard Marles said Australia was willing to discuss military spending with the US but would be making its own decisions. Credit: The Nightly/The Nightly

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Hogan: Australia deserves tariff carve-out over AUKUS commitment

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese should leverage the AUKUS defence arrangement to try to carve-out an exemption from the Trump trade tariffs, said shadow trade minister Kevin Hogan.

Mr Hogan told ABC Radio National Breakfast he was “very optimistic” Mr Albanese could secure a better tariffs deal for Australia when he meets President Trump, as expected, on the margins of the G7 summit in Canada later this week.

“I’d be reminding President Trump of two things - primarily, one is that his policy is a bad policy for Americans,” he said.

“But I’d certainly be pushing the AUKUS arrangement. We have an agreement with them, with our national security and we are going to invest a lot of money with them,” he said.

“If he wants to do tariffs for certain things. That’s his economic policy. But there should be for trusted friends, for good national security arrangements, there should be carve outs.”

‘No sacred cows’ in Coalition’s housing policy review

The new shadow housing minister insists there are “no sacred cows” in the Coalition’s policy review, including the superannuation for home deposits scheme that he strongly backed.

Andrew Bragg says while new policies are a way off, boosting housing supply is a key focus for him and there should be more attention paid to the “sticks” to punish underperforming States.

The Federal government has a target of building 1.2 million homes in the five years to mid-2029 but efforts so far are falling short.

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Four in seven years: Another election looms for poll weary Tasmanians

A state election is inching closer as an embattled premier refuses to stand down to spare voters the pain of returning to the polls.

Tasmanian Premier Jeremy Rockliff is preparing to call an early election as soon as Tuesday after narrowly losing a no-confidence motion in state parliament.

The state Liberal leader could have stood aside or been removed to allow his party to continue to govern in minority with crossbench support.

But he is forging ahead with plans to recall parliament on Tuesday to pass a bill to ensure government workers can keep getting paid, before asking Governor Barbara Baker to call an election.

She could approve his request or ask another Liberal MP or Labor leader Dean Winter to try to form minority government.

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