Critics of Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison have described his meeting with Joe Biden as a ridiculous failure, after what was supposed to be a one-to-one talk ended up being chaperoned by Boris Johnson instead.
Morrison arrived as an invited guest at the G7 summit, which is being hosted by Britain at the seaside resort town of Carbis Bay. On Sunday, he was supposed to have his first bilateral meeting with Joe Biden since the latter’s election as US president. To the surprise of the press, the talks were also attended by the host of the summit, UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson, and were closed to the media.
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The public was left to guess what was said during more than 40 minutes that the three-way discussion lasted. A short joint statement mentioned a discussion of “issues of mutual concern, including the Indo-Pacific region” and how “the strategic context” in the region warranted “deepening cooperation between the three governments.”
Morrison himself described the event as a “meeting of friends and allies, who share a view on the world,” but wouldn’t go into details when asked how many times China was brought up.
We have a comprehensive strategic partnership with China. And partnerships are about managing issues that occur within the relationship.
Australia’s relationship with China has sustained several diplomatic and economic blows during Morrison’s tenure. Among other incidents, the prime minister embraced Donald Trump’s strategy of blaming Beijing for the damage caused by the Covid-19 pandemic. He became a leading voice in demanding an international probe into the origin of the virus, inviting backlash from China.
While the Biden administration remains antagonistic to China, Morrison’s closeness to the former US president was suggested as one of the reasons Biden wouldn’t have a one-on-one with him - an outcome that Australian Senate opposition leader Penny Wong called “troubling”. MP Julian Hill even suggested there was a pattern of Biden snubbing Morrison.
First Biden walked out before Morrison spoke at the April Climate Summit.
— Julian Hill MP (@JulianHillMP) June 12, 2021
Now Biden won’t hold a 1-1 meeting with Morrison at G-7.
Maybe Morrison made the wrong call for Australia when he went all in on Trump?
Refusing to back Net Zero Emissions by 2050 isolates us further.
Earlier in April, the US president reportedly declined to listen to Morrison’s speech at a virtual climate change summit that the US had called. Unlike many other US allies, Australia defied Biden’s global agenda and would not commit to becoming carbon-neutral by 2050, with Morrison promising instead to achieve the goal “as soon as possible”.
John Hewson, the former leader of the Liberal Party, suggested that Morrison’s climate stance contributed to his reception at G7. The prime minister himself insisted that the issue was not “the subject of our discussions this afternoon”.
Our media tying itself in knots today trying to spin Biden/Morrison meeting being replaced by a trilateral including Johnson. Could it be Biden not prepared to extend Morrison the privilege given his indefensible irresponsibility and stubbornness on climate?
— John Hewson (@JohnRHewson) June 12, 2021
As public figures speculated whether the personal chemistry between Biden and Morrison was bad enough that it required Johnson to play chaperon, meme-smiths unleashed a torrent of jokes ridiculing the Australian prime minister’s treatment at the G7 summit.
Ground crew forced to carpet entire runway before Australian PM willing to land. pic.twitter.com/VxCWUG2bHB
— Mike Sampson (@mfsampson) June 12, 2021
BREAKING NEWS: Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison finally makes a contribution at the G7 talks on climate change pic.twitter.com/qqgMPSlmYN
— The Sage (@SarkySage) June 13, 2021
just made this one. Does it count? pic.twitter.com/YuulfEzSPs
— Yllek Ajrat (@AjratYllek) June 12, 2021
Australia is not part of the G7 club, but was invited as a guest, alongside India, South Korea and South Africa. Before the meeting with Biden and Johnson, Morrison had a one-on-one with South Korean President Moon Jae-in.
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