Leaders of the Quad countries, including (from left) Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, US President Joe Biden, Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, during a meeting in Tokyo in May 2022.
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese announced on May 17 that he would cancel a planned summit of the Quad, a group of countries including Australia, India, Japan and the United States. Instead, Albanese will meet the leaders of the remaining three countries in Japan this weekend when they attend a meeting of the Group of Seven (G7), Reuters reported.
"The Quad leaders' meeting will not be in Sydney next week. However, we will be holding a Quad leaders' discussion in Japan," Mr Albanese told a press conference.
The Australian prime minister said a bilateral program in Sydney with his Indian counterpart Narendra Modi could still go ahead next week.
Mr Albanese would not comment on whether Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida would also visit Sydney next week.
The Quad is an informal grouping meant to promote a free and open Indo-Pacific region, but China sees it as an attempt to push back against its growing influence in the region.
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The White House announced on May 16 that President Biden will cancel his planned visit to Australia and Papua New Guinea and cut short his trip to Asia to attend the G7 summit in Japan, due to the impasse in negotiations to raise the US debt ceiling. If the debt ceiling, currently at $31.4 trillion, is not raised, the US government could default, meaning it would have no money to pay its bills and pay its debts. The US Treasury Department predicts that this scenario could happen as early as June 1.
The Democratic president is currently negotiating with congressional leaders, primarily Republican House Speaker Kevin McCarthy. The two sides met for the second time in a week on May 16, but have yet to reach an agreement. While Biden and the Democrats want the debt ceiling to be raised unconditionally, as it has been many times before, and that it should be separate from the federal budget, Republicans, who control the House, are demanding cuts to government spending and a host of other changes.
Before the meeting, Mr. McCarthy urged President Biden to focus on domestic issues. Mr. Biden is scheduled to depart for Japan to attend the G7 summit on May 17 (US time). According to the White House statement, Mr. Biden will return to Washington DC on May 21 to participate in further negotiations with leading lawmakers to prevent the risk of a government shutdown.
India and Australia are not part of the G7, a group of seven developed industrial nations - Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United States - but have been invited to attend the conference in Japan.
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