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Analysis

Third time's a charm? Albanese and Trump meeting confirmed for next month

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has finally locked in a formal face-to-face meeting with Donald Trump, after a number of false starts.

Anthony Albanese and Donald Trump in front of an American flag

This week, the White House confirmed Albanese was not included in Trump's meeting schedule for the UN General Assembly in New York. Source: AAP / Dave Hunt, Mick Tsikas

Will the third time be a charm for Anthony Albanese?

The prime minister will make his third trip to North America in five months in October, with the White House confirming he is meeting with Donald Trump on 20 October in Washington DC.

Since Trump returned to US presidency in January, there have been four phone calls between him and Albanese.

But while Trump has declared Albanese is someone he is "friendly with", the pair has never actually met in person.
At the G7 summit in Canada in June, Trump rushed back to the White House early to deal with the conflict in the Middle East, so a proposed meeting there was cancelled.

Then last week, Trump said Albanese was coming over to see him "very soon", which some saw as a sign the prime minister might get an audience with the president in New York during the United Nations General Assembly this week.

But those expectations were dashed when the White House on Tuesday announced Trump's "very busy" schedule packed with meetings with other leaders, such as UN secretary-general António Guterres, and the leaders of Ukraine, Argentina, and the European Union. Albanese was not on the list.
Anthony Albanese addressing the United Nations
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese used his UN General Assembly speech on Tuesday to push Palestinian statehood. Source: AAP / Lukas Coch

Albanese criticised over lack of meeting

Some political insiders say meeting Trump is laden with risk for foreign leaders, and Australia is getting a reasonably good deal compared to other nations anyway when it comes to trade tariffs, so being in the room is not essential, and may be detrimental.

But with the AUKUS nuclear-powered submarine agreement under review by the US Department of War, Australia pouring billions into military investment that benefits the US, and Australia's desire for a greater tariff exemption, a lack of a meeting left the government open to criticism.

Australia still sees the US as its closest security ally, but the optics suggested Australia was not a priority for Trump.
The supposed snub also led to scrutiny around the role Australia's ambassador to the US, Kevin Rudd, has played in Washington.

On Wednesday, before the meeting was confirmed, Rudd told SBS News: "I'm doing my job, and I'll continue to do my job."

With confirmation of a meeting, Rudd will consider this job done.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese spoke with US President Donald Trump during a leaders' gathering in New York on Wednesday.

SBS News understands the pair had a conversation about their forthcoming meeting in Washington DC.


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3 min read

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By Anna Henderson
Source: SBS News


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