Australia politics live: Quad countries ink deal to build surveillance network and Fiji port to counter China | Australia news

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Australia politics live: Quad countries ink deal to build surveillance network and Fiji port to counter China | Australia news


Quad countries announce new surveillance deal

The ‘Quad’ group of countries – Australia, the United States, India and Japan – have announced a new initiative to build surveillance capabilities and critical minerals cooperation, Agence France Presse reports.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio took part in the meeting in New Delhi, and said the Quad comprised countries “who share strong values – strong, vibrant democracies” and have “many aligned interests”.

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The Quad said in a joint statement members would together mobilise US$20 billion in government and private money to strengthen critical mineral supply chains, including by identifying projects in the four countries.

They would also work together on two maritime initiatives – one that combines their surveillance capabilities, and another that will provide enhanced real-time information to commercial traffic at sea.

Australia’s foreign minister, Penny Wong, said the Quad was cooperating on assisting port development in Fiji – a key island nation in the South Pacific, where China has made a concerted push for greater influence.

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“We recognise our obligation – our responsibility – to provide real choices, particularly as strategic circumstances in our region are deteriorating,” Wong said.

The Quad in a statement also set a goal of connecting South Pacific islands through undersea cables by the end of the year, integrating them economically to the four democracies rather than China.

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‘Tough but necessary’ housing measures, O’Neil says

It’s a long road for the government trying to sell its ambitious budget, and housing minister Clare O’Neil has acknowledged that not everyone will be happy about the tax changes.

Speaking to Sunrise this morning, on a panel with Liberal frontbencher Michaelia Cash, O’Neil says the measures were the right thing to do (a similar line the PM and treasurer have made). She’s asked about new polling in the Australian Financial Review that found capital gains tax changes had a net approval rating of zero (36% of people approved, while 36% of people were against).

O’Neil didn’t seem too worried:

double quotation markWhat they show is that lots of people are supportive of what the government is doing. And then some people don’t support what the government’s doing. That is what you’d expect to see in a budget that does some tough but necessary things for the country.

In politics, you don’t do the popular thing. You do the right thing.

New polling in Guardian Australia this morning shows just a third of Australians support negative gearing and CGT changes.

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