U.S.
President Donald Trump was wasting his time deriding the media over their
coverage of his administration, Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said
on Friday, citing the example of British wartime leader Winston Churchill.
Trump has
repeatedly described media criticism of him as "fake news" since
taking office last month, labeling the media as the "opposition
party".
On Thursday,
he dismissed a growing controversy about ties between his aides and Russia as a
"ruse" and a "scam" perpetrated by a hostile news media.
Turnbull,
whose relationship with Trump got off to a rocky start earlier this month, said
the 45th American president should stop focusing on the media.
"A very
great politician, Winston Churchill, once said that politicians complaining
about the newspapers is like a sailor complaining about the sea," Turnbull
told reporters in New Zealand on Friday.
"There
is not much point. That is the media we live with and we have to get our
message across and we thank you all in the media for your kind attention,"
he said.
Turnbull is
speaking from experience as he faces a constant stream of questions from
domestic media about his leadership, with opinion polls showing the popularity
of his center-right government sinking to its lowest in more than a year.
Relations
between the United States and Australia hit a low point this month when Trump
said on Twitter that a planned refugee swap between the two nations was a
"dumb deal".
That
followed a Washington Post report about an acrimonious telephone call between
the two leaders that attracted headlines worldwide.
Asked about
his dealings with Trump, Turnbull said: "President Trump and I have had
several calls now, very constructive calls. It was frank and forthright and it
was very valuable."
Australia is
a staunch U.S. ally and is currently flying combat missions in Syria. It has
also said it was open to stepping up its military commitment against the
militant Islamic State group.
With his
promise to put "America First", Trump has also scrapped or promised
to renegotiate trade deals such as the Trans-Pacific Partnership and the North
American Free Trade Agreement since coming to office, but Turnbull warned
against a more protectionist U.S. trade stance.
"Protectionism
is not the ladder to get you out of the low growth track, it is the shovel to
dig it deeper and deeper and deeper," he said.
(Reuters)
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