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Albanese urged to confront Trump on tariffs

June 2, 2025

Monday 02 June 2025  
Paul Sakkal
Sydney Morning Herald

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has condemned Donald Trump's latest tariff  salvo on Australian metals, describing it as reckless as the opposition urged  Albanese to confront the US president about the trade strikes during a coming  meeting.
 
 On Saturday, Trump said he would double tariffs on steel and aluminium  imports to 50 per cent, days after the Court of International Trade found the  president had overstepped his authority to enact a baseline 10 per cent  blanket tariff on all types of goods.
 
 The steel and aluminium tariffs were underpinned by a different set of laws  to the 10 per cent across-the-board tariff, meaning Australia must secure an  exemption to get out of it.
 
 The US eliminated tariffs on British steel and aluminium in a deal with UK  Prime Minister Keir Starmer in May, creating a precedent for Australia to  strike a similar agreement when Albanese and Trump meet for the first time  this month. They are expected to meet either on the sidelines of the G7  summit in Canada or during a trip to the US.
 
 In Hobart yesterday, Albanese said the new trade barrier, which will affect  about $1 billion worth of Australian metal exports, represented an  ''inappropriate action by the Trump Administration''.
 
 ''This is an act of economic selfharm by the United States that will increase  the cost for consumers in the United States,'' he said, echoing the language  he used after Trump's Liberation Day tariffs.
 
 ''Because it is [applied] across the board, what it will do is not create any  comparative advantage or disadvantage for Australia compared with other  countries that export into the United States. This is something that will  just increase the cost for consumers in the United States.'' Opposition  finance spokesman James Paterson said Trump's move was a blow to Australia.  He added that he agreed with the comments of Labor ministers on the subject,  appearing to break from previous Coalition leader Peter Dutton's tactic of  claiming the opposition could secure a better deal from Trump. Paterson urged  Albanese to be ''respectful but assertive'' when he met Trump.
 
 ''This is not consistent with the US-Australia free trade agreement,'' he  said on Sky News. ''He's got to robustly stand up for Australia's national  interest.'' Paterson said it was critical for Australia to help preserve  global trading rules because they were key to Australia's prosperity.
 
 America enjoys a trade surplus with Australia, making it one of the few  countries where it sells more than the other nation buys. The US sold $US17.9  billion ($27.8 billion) more goods to Australia in 2024.
 
 Australia exported $640 million worth of steel and $440 million worth of  aluminium last year to the US. The cumulative $1 billion worth of metals  trade is a small amount compared with the nation's total exports of $660  billion in the past financial year.
 
 Trump announced the doubling of metal tariffs during a visit to the  Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, headquarters of US Steel, in front of a crowd of  workers in high-vis vests and hardhats. ''At 25 per cent they can sort of get  over that fence. At 50 per cent they can no longer get over the fence,''  Trump said. ''Nobody's going to get around that ... Nobody's going to be able  to steal your industry.'' The steel and aluminium tariffs were enacted under  trade laws rather than the emergency powers Trump used to levy a 10 per cent  across-the-board tariff. The Court of International Trade last week found  Trump had overstepped his authority on the baseline 10 per cent tariff, but  those tariffs will remain in place for now after a federal appeals court  agreed to temporarily preserve them while the administration appeals.
 
 The matter is likely to be decided by the US Supreme Court.
 
 Employment and Workplace Relations Minister Amanda Rishworth called the  doubling of metal tariffs ''unjustifiable''.
 
 ''This continues to be a difficult area, but one that we will throw  everything at,'' she told Sky News.
 
 'This is an act of economic self-harm by the United States.' Prime Minister  Anthony Albanese

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