SYDNEY: Australia’s prime minister on Wednesday played down the significance of a call from Donald Trump as “brief and uneventful”, despite mounting controversy over a politically fraught offer to help the US president.
Scott Morrison said Trump had simply asked him to establish “a point of contact” within Australia’s government for an investigation that the US president hopes will discredit findings that Russia helped his 2016 election campaign.
Morrison said he was “happy” to fulfill Trump’s request on the basis that the country’s ambassador to the United States, Joe Hockey, had already offered Australia’s assistance in the investigation back in May.
“Australia would never do anything contrary to our national interest. It would have been, frankly, more surprising had we chosen not to cooperate.” Close relations with the United States usually enjoy strong bipartisan support in Australia, but that consensus has been tested since Trump took office — with the revelations surrounding the recent phone call sparking concern that Australia may be co-opted into helping Trump tarnish his domestic political rivals.
Earlier on Wednesday, opposition leader Anthony Albanese demanded to know what information Canberra had turned over to Washington.“The prime minister needs to explain exactly what went on here. He needs to release any transcript and information which is out there,” Albanese said. “This is quite extraordinary,” he added. “The prime minister needs to make a full statement.”
Morrison did not disclose what, if anything, Australia had provided to the US, saying that the process was now a matter for officials at the bureaucrat level to handle.Trump and his media allies have long promoted theories that FBI and other investigations into Russia’s role in the 2016 election were prompted by a pro-Democrat “deep state’.
Those largely unsubstantiated allegations have ensnared allies in Britain, Italy and Australia.One of the catalysts for the FBI probe was a Trump campaign official admitting to the-then Australian ambassador in London that the Russians had “dirt” on Trump´s rival Hillary Clinton. The campaign official, George Papadopoulos, was jailed for lying to the FBI, but his allegation that the ambassador — former conservative foreign minister Alexander Downer — was one of several “spies” sent to entrap him has gained currency in Trump’s White House.
Orban’s Fidesz remains the most popular party in Hungary
Azerbaijan has been demanding the villages’ return as a precondition for a peace deal after more than three decades...
The Republican Party and the Trump campaign said in a statement that they plan to recruit an army of poll watchers
All three suffered some frostbite to their cheeks, despite wearing heated masks
Sunak sought to appeal to core Conservative voters by warning the current welfare bill was fiscally unsustainable
The inquiry published its report in 2010, finding that some soldiers had knowingly put forward false accounts