Peter Dutton – Michmutters
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Australia

Peter Dutton ‘very strongly supports’ Richard Marles’ language used about nuclear submarines as he warns of Taiwan invasion

Opposition Leader Peter Dutton has stressed the importance of acquiring nuclear-powered submarines as soon as possible after the Chinese Ambassador to Australia delivered his first National Press Club speech this week.

Xiao Qian – who became Beijing’s top diplomat in Canberra this year – had defended China’s actions when it responded with live military drills in Taiwan following the historic visit from United States House Speaker Nancy Pelosi last week.

He warned Australia to handle the messaging around Taiwan “with caution” and added there was “no room for compromise” as China sees the island as its own territory.

Mr Xiao also threatened Beijing would take Taipei with force and would be “ready to use all necessary measures” to restore the liberal democracy “to the motherland”.

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Mr Dutton said he was not “shocked” by the remarks from the ambassador as the messaging was similar to what was delivered by Chinese President Xi Jinping.

But he agreed it was alarming to hear the comments being made on Australian shores before he flagged it would be no “surprise” if China invaded the island.

“I don’t think anyone would be surprised if there was an incursion into Taiwan,” he told ABC’s 7:30 on Thursday.

The Opposition Leader then stressed the importance of having a “deterrence in place”, in the form of nuclear submarines, to ward off a potential future attack.

“China is clear that their center of humiliation doesn’t come to an end until there is a re-unification, in their words, so it is important for us to have deterrence in place because any adversary should know that a strike on Australia would ‘t be accepted,” he said.

“And there would be retaliation and also weed need to be close and fight with our allies, not just America, but India and Japan.”

While Australia’s national security would be secure under the AUKUS alliance with the US and United Kingdom for the next five to six decades, he warned the nation needed nuclear-powered submarines to plug the capability gap.

He also came to the support of Defense Minister Richard Marles who insisted this week it is the government’s “top priority” to fill the gap left by the Collins fleet of boats.

“Yes, I very strongly support Richard Marles,” he said.

“He is adopting similar language that I used not too long ago to say if we can get those submarines off the production line, then we should certainly strongly believe that that is possible and that’s the course of action that the government should be pursuing. “

Mr Dutton also welcomed the response from Mr Marles, Foreign Minister Penny Wong and Prime Minister Anthony Albanese who have all called for a de-escalation of tensions in the Taiwan region but believes the messaging can be stronger.

“I believe very strongly that we are better to speak frankly about China’s intent – they’re clear about it themselves, as we have discussed, and it is important for Australians to hear that message,” he said.

Mr Marles is set to make a decision by March 2023 on whether Australia will go with acquiring eight US Virginia-class or British Astute-class built submarines.

The government is expected to decide then whether Australia will need interim, conventionally powered submarines before the AUKUS vessels are ready to hit the water, which may not be for another 20 years around the 2040s.

Mr Marles said this week he would like to see the new boats constructed in Australia as part of a beefing up of its domestic defense manufacturing ability.

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Australia

From a trip to the laundromat to those dagwood dog photos: Peter Dutton and Richard Marles joke about the past week

Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles and Opposition Leader Peter Dutton have turned a serious conversation on Australia-China relations to poking fun at each other over a washing machine saga and an iconic dagwood dog moment.

The pair’s weekly appearance on the Today show turned jovial when Mr Marles, who is Acting Prime Minister while Anthony Albanese is on leave, revealed his washing machine was broken.

Mr Dutton accused the Defense Minister of lacking domestic skills, saying: “Richard wouldn’t know whether he has a front loader or top loader at home”.

“That’s not true. I do the washing!” Mr Marles hit back in defence.

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The Acting Prime Minister then went on to detail his adventure to do the washing.

“We did get to the laundromat with six Federal Police,” Mr Marles said.

“As they’re talking into their cuffs, all the other people in the laundromat were thinking, what on earth is going on here.

“We managed to get in there and get the job done, myself and my son.”

Mr Dutton said he wanted to see “evidence” of the trip to the laundromat.

Mr Marles then weighed in on the discussion around Mr Dutton eating a dagwood dog at Brisbane’s Ekka on Thursday.

The Liberal leader was pictured armed with three dagwood dogs before taking a large mouthful of the tomato sauce-laden battered sausage.

“Can I just say, as always, Peter is an absolute picture of elegance,” Mr Marles laughed.

Mr Dutton defended the iconic Aussie snack, saying: “If you go to the Ekka, you have to have a dagwood dog.”

“I mean, you eat it on the side and chew into the stick.

“You drop the sauce on your pants, which is a bad shot.

“What choice were you giving me?”

In July, the pair revealed they came together to celebrate Mr Marles’ 55th birthday while in America – further cementing their unlikely friendship.

“It was a gathering of about 900 people and he was center stage,” the Opposition Leader said.

“Too many birthday candles for me to report back, but it was a nice occasion… I was really touched to be there.”

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Australia

‘There is no good angle’: Liberal leader Peter Dutton breaks silence over embarrassing dagwood dog photo at Brisbane’s Ekka

Peter Dutton has responded to a photo showing him awkwardly eating a dagwood dog at Brisbane’s Ekka, admitting “there is no good angle”.

The Opposition Leader was spotted tearing into the iconic Aussie snack at Queensland’s annual agricultural show on Wednesday.

He was pictured armed with three dagwood dogs before taking a large mouthful of the tomato sauce-laden battered sausage.

But Mr Dutton revealed the images caused quite a stir once posted online as he was bombarded with text messages from friends.

“Most of my mates actually were pretty rapid-fire texting me like, ‘WTF’,” Mr Dutton told 2Day FM radio.

“But anyway, what do you do?”

Mr Dutton compared the incident to Bill Shorten’s infamous 2016 photo showing the former Labor leader eating a sausage sizzle from the middle.

“With the cameras there, I mean you can’t eat it from the side because the sauce drips off and you do a Bill Shorten… so it leaves one angle and it’s not a great one,” Mr Dutton joked.

“There is no good angle, so you just accept your fate, right?

“But chewing from the side was definitely not an option.”

Mr Dutton is one of many politicians caught awkwardly eating on camera.

In 2019, former prime minister Malcolm Turnbull was ridiculed after he was photographed eating a meat pie with a knife and fork.

His predecessor Tony Abbott left Australians scratching their heads when he was filmed in 2015 biting into a raw onion with its skin on.

Meanwhile, Mr Shorten recently opened up about his unorthodox method of eating a sausage sizzle.

“Listen, I just want to clear up the great scandal of the 2016 election,” he told Today in May.

“The bread roll which I ate from the middle, you would have needed to have the jaws of, you know, a great white to eat it from the end.

“It would have done my dentures.”

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