Hogan says Australia ought to use crucial minerals entry as ‘leverage level’ with Trump on tariffs
Coalition MP Kevin Hogan says Australia ought to use extra of its “leverage factors” to barter an exemption from the Trump administration’s commerce tariffs.
Hogan has been talking on ABC Radio Nationwide Breakfast, a couple of days after the US introduced it could reject Australia’s plea to be exempt from 25% tariffs on metal and aluminium imports.
He factors to Australia’s crucial minerals provide for example of one thing Australia may use as a bargaining device, saying:
Now we have some nice crucial minerals which can be essential to them, particularly some that they will’t entry.
We truly consider we’ve got extra leverage factors with America now [than] a couple of years in the past.
Hogan says the Coalition believes it’s “essential” that the negotiations be carried out “chief to chief” and he says the prime minister, Anthony Albanese, ought to go to the US to talk to Donald Trump.
He stated:
That’s how Trump … operates. And it’s very disappointing that our chief hasn’t discovered the need to go over and do this.
A powerful chief would guarantee that they received that assembly.
Key occasions
The inquiry may even take into account the how the findings and proposals of the final parliamentary inquiry into the Northern Seashores Hospital in 2019, which checked out its operation and administration have since been applied.
Park saidd the inquiry was a dedication he made to Massa’s mother and father “to undertake the required evaluations to grasp how they and their son have been let down, in addition to to study what adjustments should be made to stop such a tragedy from occurring once more.”
He stated:
I’m grateful to the Massas for his or her generosity in time and spirit in working with us to honour Joe’s reminiscence.
Li stated they’d announce the opening of submissions in addition to listening to dates sooner or later.

Natasha Might
Parliamentary inquiry into Northern Seashores hospital introduced
The parliamentary inquiry into Northern Seashores Hospital, which the NSW well being minister promised would happen following the demise of two-year-old Joe Massa on the hospital’s emergency ward in September, has been introduced.
The NSW Health minister, Ryan Park, confirmed this morning the state parliament’s Public Accounts Committee will conduct the inquiry into the security and high quality of well being providers supplied by Northern Seashores Hospital.
The chair of the committee, Jason Yat-Sen Li, stated “I’m decided to get this inquiry underway as shortly as potential, however I additionally wish to get it proper.
The scope of the inquiry will stretch again to the hospital’s graduation as a privately operated facility from October 2018 and can take into account incidents on the hospital together with these the topic of great adversarial occasion evaluations, how the hospital responded, and the extent to which it applied adjustments prompted by these incidents.
The inquiry will have a look at how the hospital helps affected person and carer escalation, together with the REACH protocol which permits relations and carers to set off an impartial assessment of a affected person’s therapy – an initiative which Park acknowledge was “insufficiently accessible” within the case of Joe Massa.
It can additionally study the adequacy of techniques and processes designed to stop adversarial occasions, in addition to the employees requirements and capabilities.
Scott Morrison weighs in on Trump’s actions referring to Ukraine struggle
Former prime minister Scott Morrison says he doesn’t consider a Trump presidency will alter the US’ intelligence sharing relationship with its allies, together with Australia.
In an interview with Occasions Radio, Morrison has weighed in on the Trump administration’s potential impact on the 5 Eyes partnership given his place on the struggle in Ukraine.
After greater than three years of struggle following Russia’s invasion of its smaller neighbour, US president Donald Trump has outlined a ceasefire deal, which the Kremlin is but to comply with.
Morrison stated it was a “misinterpret” to interpret this as Trump being ready to “go it alone”.
He stated:
I believe what the president is attempting to do right here is finish a struggle that has reached a stalemate.
For the final three years we’ve got been engaged on this at horrible price to everyone concerned – most importantly, the individuals of Ukraine.
Morrison stated he didn’t assume Trump put the 5 Eyes intelligence sharing association between Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the UK and the US in jeopardy.
He stated:
You don’t go into all of those specific occasions as a as a collective, everyone has their very own capabilities, and there are methods that that’s shared between all of us.
However how particular person events share what they’ve entry to with third events exterior the settlement is a matter for them.
1000’s of individuals in Qld stay with out energy after ex-Tropical Cyclone Alfred
1000’s of households stay with out energy in south-east Queensland practically every week after ex-Tropical Cyclone Alfred made landfall.
Energex, the Queensland government-owned electrical energy firm that distributes energy to 1.5m houses and companies throughout the area, says 17,101 prospects had been nonetheless with out energy as of 7am, this morning.
A large clean-up operation is beneath means after extreme climate related to Alfred hit the state.
You may learn extra about that right here:
Coalition’s Hogan: Aukus funding might be tariff bargaining chip
Hogan says Australia may use additionally its funding for the Aukus safety partnership to barter US tariffs.
Now we have the $800m Aukus cheque that [defence minister] Richard Marles simply went over and threw on the desk as a part of the take care of Aukus.
Hogan’s feedback come after Australia made its first $800m (US $500m) fee beneath the Aukus defence settlement, beneath which it would purchase nuclear-powered submarines.
Reuters reported that the US defence secretary, Pete Hegseth, stated president Donald Trump helps the trilateral safety settlement between Australia, the US and the UK.
Underneath the pact, Australia can pay the US $4.78bn to spice up the capability of the US submarine business, and Washington will promote a number of Virginia-class nuclear-powered submarines to Australia within the early 2030s.
Britain and Australia intend to later construct a brand new Aukus-class submarine as a part of the settlement.
You may learn extra right here:
Hogan says Australia ought to use crucial minerals entry as ‘leverage level’ with Trump on tariffs
Coalition MP Kevin Hogan says Australia ought to use extra of its “leverage factors” to barter an exemption from the Trump administration’s commerce tariffs.
Hogan has been talking on ABC Radio Nationwide Breakfast, a couple of days after the US introduced it could reject Australia’s plea to be exempt from 25% tariffs on metal and aluminium imports.
He factors to Australia’s crucial minerals provide for example of one thing Australia may use as a bargaining device, saying:
Now we have some nice crucial minerals which can be essential to them, particularly some that they will’t entry.
We truly consider we’ve got extra leverage factors with America now [than] a couple of years in the past.
Hogan says the Coalition believes it’s “essential” that the negotiations be carried out “chief to chief” and he says the prime minister, Anthony Albanese, ought to go to the US to talk to Donald Trump.
He stated:
That’s how Trump … operates. And it’s very disappointing that our chief hasn’t discovered the need to go over and do this.
A powerful chief would guarantee that they received that assembly.
Opposition vitality spokesperson O’Brien spruiks Coalition’s fuel coverage
The opposition’s vitality spokesperson, Ted O’Brien, has talked up the significance of fuel to make sure electrical energy provide “within the short-term”.
O’Brien has been interviewed on ABC Information Breakfast, after the vitality regulator’s announcement yesterday that it was anticipating energy payments for residential prospects to extend by between 2.5% and eight.9% – relying on the area – in contrast with final yr.
Requested what the Coalition would do within the short-term to carry down energy payments, O’Brien stated:
Within the short-term, the precedence needs to be fuel.
Fuel will be costly however in the case of electrical energy, you don’t want numerous fuel, you simply want it in the fitting volumes on the proper time, on the proper place and on the proper worth.
The Coalition’s strategy is we have to pour extra fuel into the market.
O’Brien pointed to the Coalition’s coverage of accelerating home fuel manufacturing for home provide.
He stated:
The Coalition believes we have to use Australian fuel for Australians first, that needs to be the precedence.
The one means you get costs right down to have low-cost, clear and constant vitality on this nation is a balanced vitality combine: renewables, fuel and, as coal retires, nuclear.
Company evacuated after Surfers Paradise resort catches on fireplace
Company at a resort in Surfers Paradise had been evacuated in a single day after the constructing caught fireplace.
A spokesperson for the Queensland Fireplace Division stated six crews responded to experiences of a fireplace on the Hilton Lodge Surfers Paradise at about 1.50am.
A hearth had began on the roof, with falling embers beginning one other fireplace on the pool deck, the spokesperson stated.
Fireplace crews had extinguished the pool deck fireplace by about 2.20am and put out the roof fireplace by about 2.40am, with company allowed to return to their rooms at about 3am.
The spokesperson stated the fireplace was “comparatively small” they usually couldn’t say what brought about it.
There have been no experiences of any accidents, the spokesperson stated.

Catie McLeod
Howdy, I’ll be taking you thru in the present day’s information till this afternoon. I hope you might have an excellent morning.
Coalition insurance policies will get the Full Story therapy
Staying with the Coalition and politics, in the present day’s Newsroom version of the Full Story podcast seems at this very subject.
Reged Ahmad talks to Guardian Australia’s editor-in-chief Lenore Taylor, head of newsroom Mike Ticher and nationwide information editor Jo Tovey about whether or not Peter Dutton’s missteps and the Coalition’s coverage issues will begin to add up within the minds of voters.
Test it out right here:
Some Coalition MPs worrying about opposition’s election coverage providing
Some Coalition MPs are involved that they may begin the federal election marketing campaign and not using a correct coverage to promote to households feeling the pinch from the cost-of-living disaster.
Yesterday, Peter Dutton once more performed down the prospect of earnings tax cuts and in the present day we’re reporting on a brand new subject the place he may come beneath strain himself, particularly his plan to crack down on working from dwelling.
He has been fairly outspoken about making federal employees work from the workplace and the Coalition launched the coverage final week.
However some assume it might not be correctly “thought via” as a result of working from house is fashionable with numerous voters, and appeals particularly to working skilled ladies of the kind the Coalition has to win again in teal seats.
Learn our full story right here:
We’re up towards a deep, ideological, strategic US view, says Rudd
On the ABC final evening, Australia’s ambassador to the US Kevin Rudd stated he would proceed combating for tariff exemptions for Australian items regardless of what seems to be an uphill battle in Washington.
Optimism about successful a carve out appears to be fading, with Rudd admitting negotiations have been tough and declaring that America’s historic commerce surplus with Australia had not reduce any ice.
Rudd stated:
We’re up towards a deep, ideological, strategic view of this Trump administration. These are deep-seated, basic adjustments on this completely different America, which each and every one of many 36 nations who negotiated tariff exemptions on metal and aluminium final time spherical, again in 2017, have needed to cope with this time spherical.
Rudd additionally revealed that he had requested Anthony Albanese to make a second name to Trump this week however “by the point the choice was taken, late Tuesday, we had not been in a position to safe that point”.
I believe it stands to motive we should always query whether or not, in reality, even this request for a late phone name would have essentially made a cloth distinction.
Learn extra:
Excessive temperatures anticipated in south-eastern Australia
A lot of south-east Australia is in for a scorching weekend as temperatures head into the 30s in Sydney. Coastal suburbs will see about 31C on the guage whereas it might be as much as 35C within the west.
Will probably be particularly scorching within the southern area of New South Wales the place it’s anticipated to be about 37C in Wagga Wagga.
Melbourne might be milder, at about 27C however rural Victoria may see excessive 30s north of the ranges, in accordance with Angus Hines of the Bureau of Meteorology.
South Australia may even be extremely popular for this time of yr with 35C in Adelaide.
The BoM launched its long-range forecast for April through to June in a single day and predicts that we are able to count on hotter than common days and a few unusually excessive daytime temperatures throughout the nation.
The identical goes for night-time temperatures with hotter than common readings “very possible” and an “elevated likelihood” of unusually excessive in a single day temperatures.
Rainfall-wise, ranges are anticipated to be inside the typical vary for the interval throughout most of jap, central and southern Australia, and above common throughout elements of the north.
States brace for listening to new GST carve-up plan
State and territory leaders sweating on their take of the GST will lastly study their destiny as the brand new carve-up is revealed within the lead-up to the federal election, experiences Australian Related Press.
The commonwealth grants fee will hand down suggestions to the treasurer Jim Chalmers on Friday about the best way to distribute the tax income for the 2025-26 monetary yr.
The impartial authority has adopted a brand new means of assessing how a lot every jurisdiction will get as the strategy is reviewed each 5 years, however the verdict in 2025 comes with the added consideration of a federal election on the horizon.
The carve-up regularly comes beneath fiery criticism from state and territory leaders.
Labor leaders within the two most populous states received caught right into a disagreement with one another in 2024 when the NSW premier, Chris Minns, described Victoria as a “welfare state”.
Former Victorian treasurer Tim Pallas returned fireplace, claiming Minns didn’t perceive the GST system.
It’s additionally a significant speaking level in resource-heavy Western Australia, which benefited from a lift in 2018 beneath the Coalition.
Anthony Albanese vowed to not change the association within the west and in February 2024 even signed the promise on the arm of a journalist whereas visiting Perth.
NSW and Victoria have been pushing for a per-capita distribution whereas Queensland’s former deputy premier Cameron Dick hit out on the fee’s determination to look at how coal royalty income is calculated.
States and territories depend on GST for funding for monetary help to fund main expenditure together with well being, training, infrastructure and housing.
Welcome
Good morning and welcome to our dwell information weblog. I’m Martin Farrer with the highest in a single day tales after which Catie McLeod might be on the controls.
Kevin Rudd has vowed to maintain combating for exemptions from US tariffs, however advised 7.30 final evening that he and his “group Australia” has already “thrown every little thing” at talks with the Trump administration. Australia’s ambassador to the US advised the ABC that the talks with the White Home commerce group had been “robust”. Farmers fear they could be next in line for commerce levies on Australia’s $6.2bn in meat exports, whereas Trump is slapping a 200% levy on European wine.
Now we have heard grumbling this week from Coalition insiders sad about what they see as an insufficient financial coverage providing going into the federal election. In the present day we’re reporting that some within the Liberal and Nationwide camp worry that Peter Dutton’s vow to crack down on working from dwelling coverage is not “fully thought through” and will hamper the drive to win again teal seats.
A lot of south-east Australia will expertise very heat climate over the weekend with some inland elements of Victoria and NSW approaching 40C. The Bureau of Meteorology’s long-term forecast suggests the nation is in for spells of “unusually” heat climate within the months to June.
The annual carve-up of GST income between the states is a reasonably dry topic, however arouses a lot ardour amongst premiers eager to stability their budgets (or assign blame for purple ink). Extra on this quickly.