SYDNEY (Reuters) – Australia Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said his relationship with U.S. President-elect Donald Trump has had a “very good beginning”, elaborating on a phone call between the pair after the Republican’s U.S. election win.
Albanese this week said he told Trump on the call that the United States has a trade surplus with Australia and it was in Washington’s interest to “trade fairly” with its ally.
Under the first Trump presidency, Australia won an exemption from U.S. tariffs for its aluminium and steel exports.
In remarks broadcast on Sky News on Sunday, Albanese described the call as a “very good beginning to our relationship”.
It was a “positive phone call that we had. We spoke for 10 minutes, it was one of the first phone calls that he made,” the leader of Australia’s centre-left Labor government said, according to a transcript.
Albanese’s call with Trump also covered security ties including the AUKUS deal, which will see Australia buy U.S. nuclear submarines next decade and develop a new class of nuclear powered submarines with the U.S. and Britain.
Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong said this month that the centre-left Labor government was confident of its alliance with the United States, its biggest security partner.
(Reporting by Sam McKeith in Sydney; Editing by Nick Zieminski)
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