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Australia news live: Andrew Hastie says US alliance weakened Australia; Sri Lanka hackers steal millions owed to Australia | Australia news

Australia news live: Andrew Hastie says US alliance weakened Australia; Sri Lanka hackers steal millions owed to Australia | Australia news

Hastie says US alliance has eroded Australia ‘sovereign capability’

Dan Jervis-Bardy

The Liberal frontbencher, Andrew Hastie, says doubling down on the US relationship has eroded Australia’s sovereign capability, including its defence industry, as he warns the country must “get serious” about national security to rebalance the alliance.

In a speech to the Robert Menzies Institute in Melbourne last night, the shadow minister for industry and sovereign capability said the reliance on the US meant “strategic trade-offs” that had hastened the deindustrialisation of Australia and “weakened our hard power”.

Andrew Hastie.
Andrew Hastie. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP

He said it had cost Australia “sovereign capabilities like a robust defence industry”, and “strategic freedom of action” in ways that we are now becoming clear amid the Middle East war.

Hastie said under Donald Trump the US “should not be expected to guarantee much except its own strategic interests”, which meant Australia must “get serious about our own national security” by rebuilding its industrial base and a defence force “with teeth”.

double quotation markTo put it bluntly, if Anzus is going to continue for another 75 years, we need to invest in our industrial base and our defence force.

The former soldier has been an outspoken critic of Trump and his war in Iran, striking a different tone to the opposition leader Angus Taylor.

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Catie McLeod

Catie McLeod

Court hears Woolworths planned price hikes and subsequent drops

Under cross-examination by the ACCC’s barrister, Michael Hodge KC, Robinson conceded Woolworths had planned the elevated short-term price of $6.50 would become the product’s “was” price before it was even changed.

Robinson also acknowledged the supermarket negotiated profit margins with the supplier based on the third “Prices Dropped” price of $6.

The court was shown the proposed promotional plan for the baby rice from 2022 which said the number of weeks it would be at the new shelf price of $6.50 was “zero” whereas the number of weeks it would then be sold for $6 was 52.

Woolworths denies the ACCC’s allegation that in many cases it inflated prices solely to establish a higher “was” price so that it could make customers think they were getting a discount.

Sam Woodcock, who has worked in management roles across Woolworths for more than nine years, also appeared as a witness.

Woodock conceded Woolworths had planned price hikes and subsequent drops promoted as discounts in negotiation with the product suppliers.

“Essentially if a supplier proposes a cost price increase to be effective from a certain date and we don’t accept that as a retailer, there’s a risk that … that a supplier will choose not to supply us that product anymore,” he told the court.

The case continues.

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