News live: King Charles praises ‘ambitious’ Aukus and expresses pride in Australia in speech to US Congress | Australia news


King Charles praises ‘ambitious’ Aukus in speech to US Congress

King Charles’ address to the US Congress has been covered over in our US politics blog (check it out here).

But it’s worth noting that Australia got a shout-out, and specifically the Aukus nuclear submarine program, in a section of the speech that pointedly dwelt on the importance of defence ties between the US and UK (and Nato more broadly).

The king said:

double quotation markOur defence, intelligence and security ties are hardwired together through relationships measured not in years, but in decades.

Today, thousands of US service personnel, defence officials and their families are stationed in the United Kingdom, as British personnel serve with equal pride across 30 American states.

We are building F-35s together.

And we have agreed the most ambitious submarine programme in history, Aukus.

And we do so in partnership with Australia, a country of which I am also immensely proud to serve as sovereign.

We do not embark on these remarkable endeavours together out of sentiment.

We do so because they build greater shared resilience for the future, so making our citizens safer for generations to come.

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Dan Jervis-Bardy

Here’s more from Dan.

The projects would need to comply with proposed new national environmental standards, which government sources insist will be in place before the bilateral agreements are negotiated.

Albanese has previously explained that instead of a costly two-stage, two-track process, the government wants a one-step process, “with one, clearer, faster, yes or no” that can act as a “circuit breaker”.

The prime minister will address the miners following reports last week that he had ruled out introducing a new tax on gas exports in the 12 May federal budget – a policy the industry vehemently opposes.

In the speech to the Chamber of Minerals and Energy WA, Albanese will frame the budget as the most ambitious and important since Labor returned to power in 2022 as the government grapples with the impact of the Iran war and global fuel crisis.

Albanese will say:

None of us here can determine when this war will end. But all of us can choose how we respond to the economic challenges it is creating. We can choose what we learn from this global crisis, even before it ends. And we can choose what we are going to do differently, as a country. What we will build and change and reform, so that Australia does more than weather this storm, we emerge from it as a stronger, fairer and more resilient country.

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