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Hockey meets with Trump staffer as Turnbull claims 'frank' call with Trump a win

Opposition leader Bill Shorten has thrown his support behind Malcolm Turnbull after the PM's 'very frank' phone call with the US president became an international talking point.

Malcolm Turnbull
Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull Source: AAP

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull is hailing his “frank” phone call with US President Donald Trump as a win, and says despite Mr Trump’s criticism of a much-anticipated refugee deal with Australia he was persuaded into honouring it.

“I always make my case as persuasively as I can. I stand up for Australia. I stand up for our interests,” he told 2SM Radio in Sydney.

“It's obviously a deal he (Trump) wouldn't have done. He's expressed his views about it but he has committed to doing it.

"So, from my point of view acting in Australia's interests, we secured the commitment from the US President that we wanted," he said.

Mr Turnbull's comments came as Australia's ambassador to the US Joe Hockey met with Donald Trump's chief of staff Reince Priebus and top strategist Steve Bannon.

"Mr Priebus and Mr Bannon had a productive meeting with the Australian ambassador at the White House," a White House official said on Thursday.

"They conveyed the president's deep admiration for the Australian people."

The meeting followed a tense call between Malcolm Turnbull and Donald Trump over a refugee resettlement deal that saw relations between to two countries become strained.

The deal was initially struck between Australia and the United States in the final few months of former US President Barack Obama’s time in the White House.

The US agreed to resettle refugees who are currently in held in Australian immigration detention on Manus Island in PNG and Nauru.

But in recent days Donald Trump has thrown doubt over its future over social media, including a tweet in which he described it as a ‘dumb deal’.

Mr Trump has since moved to clarify his comments and more recently said he loves Australia.

"If a previous administration does something you have to respect that but you can also say, 'Why are we doing this?'” he told reporters in Washington.

He said he would honour the deal but only refugees who passed extreme vetting would be allowed into the US. 

Mr Turnbull said he was disappointed information about his phone call with President Trump had been leaked from the White House.

“It's really important for me to be disciplined and circumspect about what goes on between me and the President of the United States," Mr Turnbull said.

"If people in America want to leak or make claims about what was in a conversation, that's disappointing but I'm not going to do that.”

The Prime Minister has described a 25-minute phone call with President Trump over the weekend as "very frank" and "forthright" but denies reports that the US President hung up on him.

“He's been very critical of the deal that President Obama did and he clearly wouldn't have done it himself but we have persuaded him to stick with it nonetheless and that was the outcome I wanted,” Mr Turnbull said.

Mr Trump has since moved to clarify his comments and more recently said he loves Australia.

"If a previous administration does something you have to respect that but you can also say, 'Why are we doing this?'” he told reporters in Washington.

He said he would honour the deal but only refugees who passed extreme vetting would be allowed into the US. 

Mr Turnbull said he was disappointed information about his phone call with President Trump had been leaked from the White House.

“It's really important for me to be disciplined and circumspect about what goes on between me and the President of the United States," Mr Turnbull said.

"If people in America want to leak or make claims about what was in a conversation, that's disappointing but I'm not going to do that.”

The Prime Minister has described a 25-minute phone call with President Trump over the weekend as "very frank" and "forthright" but denies reports that the US President hung up on him.

“He's been very critical of the deal that President Obama did and he clearly wouldn't have done it himself but we have persuaded him to stick with it nonetheless and that was the outcome I wanted,” Mr Turnbull said.

 


4 min read

Published

Updated

By Marija Jovanovic




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