Australia PM says ambassador Rudd doing ‘great job’ after fresh Trump comments

Australian Ambassador to the US Kevin Rudd speaks at the Center for Strategic and International Studies on Aug. 20. (Australian Embassy)
Short Url
Updated 26 October 2025
Follow

Australia PM says ambassador Rudd doing ‘great job’ after fresh Trump comments

  • Albanese has praised the ambassador’s work to build support for the AUKUS nuclear submarine deal in Congress

SYDNEY: Prime Minister Anthony Albanese rejected on Sunday questions about whether Australia’s ambassador in Washington was becoming a problem, after local media reported fresh remarks made about Kevin Rudd by US President Donald Trump.
Labor leader Albanese is a supporter of Rudd, a former Labor prime minister, who called Trump in 2020 “the most destructive president in history,” later deleting the comment from social media when he was appointed ambassador.
Albanese, who this week signed a critical minerals deal with the US at a summit in Washington, has endorsed Rudd as doing a “fantastic job” as envoy, describing comments by Trump at the summit that he does not like the ambassador as “light-hearted.”
On Sunday local media reported that Trump, on Friday night Washington time, said of Rudd: “I think he said a long time ago something bad. You know, when they say bad about me, I don’t forget.”
Asked on Australia’s Seven Network television if Rudd’s role was becoming a problem, Albanese said: “No, it’s not.”
“Kevin Rudd’s doing a great job as ambassador,” he added, according to a transcript.
Albanese has praised the ambassador’s work to build support for the AUKUS nuclear submarine deal in Congress and to prepare for his first summit with Trump, which Australia has declared a success.
Australia’s main conservative opposition party called for Rudd to be sacked after Trump made the initial comments about the ambassador at a media conference in Washington on Monday.
Rudd swept to power as prime minister in 2007 as a Mandarin-speaking progressive, returning center-left Labor to office after a decade in opposition. He was dumped by his party in 2010 but returned as prime minister briefly in 2013.


Australia man arrested for alleged terror plot targeting mosques, police and parliament

Updated 5 sec ago
Follow

Australia man arrested for alleged terror plot targeting mosques, police and parliament

  • Police said the ‌20-year-old man had written ​a manifesto ‌with ⁠plans ​for a ⁠mass casualty event
  • Prime Minister Anthony Albanese described the alleged plot as "deeply shocking"
SYDNEY: A 20-year-old man from Bindoon, a town about 63 km north of Perth, has been arrested and charged by police with planning a terrorist act targeting mosques, Western Australia's police headquarters and Parliament House.

Police said the man, identified as Jayson Joseph Michaels, had written a manifesto outlining plans for a mass casualty event. The arrest was made on Friday.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese described the alleged plot as "deeply shocking," posting on X late Friday: "The arrest of a WA man over an alleged racially-motivated terrorist plot is deeply shocking."

"Allegations the man was planning to target the Muslim community through attacks on mosques — as well as attacks on the WA police and parliament — are particularly distressing. He should face the full force of the law," Albanese added.

The incident is the latest in a series of events classified as terrorism in Australia. On January 26, an attempt was made to bomb a rally in Perth protesting against the country's national day.

In December, two gunmen attacked a Hanukkah celebration at Sydney's Bondi Beach, killing 15 people in Australia's deadliest massacre in nearly 30 years. Authorities believe the pair were inspired by the Daesh, or Islamic State, group.