Senate debates
Thursday, 10 November 2016
Questions without Notice
United States Election
2:13 pm
Marise Payne (NSW, Liberal Party, Minister for Defence) Share this | Hansard source
I thank the Leader of the Australian Greens for his question. I want to acknowledge the election of President-elect Donald Trump and congratulate him on that outcome.
The Australia-US alliance has seen changes of government on both sides of the Pacific multiple times over the last 65 years, and the outcome has continued to be that the alliance continues to grow, to deepen and indeed to strengthen. In fact, over the last year alone I have forged a very strong relationship with their current Secretary of Defence, Ashton Carter. I look forward to that continuing through the transition period until the commencement of the inauguration process, and then of course to forming a similar strong relationship with the new Secretary of Defence as Australian defence ministers have done decade in and decade out.
As we outlined in the 2016 Defence white paper, the US continues to be our most important strategic partner through this longstanding alliance. The presence of the United States in this region has underpinned its stability for decades as well. We have fought side-by-side in every major conflict since World War I. We will continue to work side-by-side as we now do today—literally today—in the Middle East. We will counter shared threats and support global stability.
Indeed, I think we need to have a positive approach to engaging with the new Republican administration. I think we need to acknowledge the strength and depth of our relationship. We need to take the opportunity to build new personal relationships, to continue to engage and to interact in the ways that I have described. I have absolute confidence that our engagement with the United States will remain strong. (Time expired)
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