Politics
Labor MP calls for AUKUS 'renegotiation'
Key Points
Labor MP Ed Husic calls for AUKUS 'renegotiation' after Virginia-class changes Tue 2 Jun 2026 at 4:12pm In short: Labor backbencher Ed Husic has called into question the future of the AUKUS pact and argues Labor needs to renegotiate the deal. Mr Husic says changes to the pact announced over the weekend provide an opportunity to reconsider AUKUS altogether.
Labor MP Ed Husic calls for AUKUS 'renegotiation' after Virginia-class changes
Tue 2 Jun 2026 at 4:12pm
In short:
Labor backbencher Ed Husic has called into question the future of the AUKUS pact and argues Labor needs to renegotiate the deal.
Mr Husic says changes to the pact announced over the weekend provide an opportunity to reconsider AUKUS altogether.
What's next:
Mr Husic will not be drawn on whether others in the Labor caucus feel the same way, but says there is clear 'disquiet' within Labor's rank and file on the issue.
Labor MP Ed Husic says Australia needs to look at renegotiating the AUKUS pact with the United States and United Kingdom and start contemplating alternative options.
The outspoken backbencher has pointed to changes agreed with the United States over the weekend, under which Australia will buy three used Virginia-class submarines rather than two used and one new, as a catalyst to consider changes.
Defence Minister Richard Marles met with US War Secretary Pete Hegseth in Singapore on Saturday, where the pair reaffirmed the AUKUS pact but announced the change to the delivery plan.
Mr Marles has argued acquiring three used submarines in the 2030s would "streamline" an "incredibly complicated" deal.
A Labor MP questioned the prime minister during Labor's caucus meeting earlier today, arguing the changed deal should prompt a reconsideration of the party's commitment to AUKUS.
While not confirming he was the MP who raised the issue, Mr Husic said there was clearly a need to question whether AUKUS could be delivered as promised.
"This deal has changed, and as a result, we need to recognise — is there anything that is going to improve this outcome or alter it? I don't think so,"he said.
"There's obviously been — this is a great understatement — but you've seen within the broader [Labor] movement a general disquiet about the nature of the deal itself.
"But putting all that aside, there's an issue about reality, and that confronting us about whether or not we will even get the new deal that has been put to us based on what's happening in the US."
Mr Husic has pointed to challenges in American shipyards struggling to lift their rate of production of Virginia-class submarines as one clear issue in the deal, and says it is what likely provoked the change announced over the weekend.
The United States is trying to double its production rate from just over one submarine a year to more than two a year, aiming to sell submarines to Australia without setting back the growth of its own fleet.
He said the AUKUS deal needed to be renegotiated and alternative options explored.
"I think the reality on the ground will force a renegotiation. It won't be a renegotiation, it's a reality about the production rates and whether or not we'll get them," Mr Husic said.
"I will make this other point — what's the contingency, what's the plan B?"
Coalition questions Labor commitment
The federal opposition has leapt on the comments from Mr Husic, arguing it is a sign of fracturing of support for the nuclear submarine pact.
Shadow Defence Minister James Paterson said the prime minister and defence minister should shut down dissent in Labor ranks.
"We now have a full-on Labor revolt when it comes to Australia's signature defence policy,"he said.
"Richard Marles needs to show leadership — he needs to haul Ed Husic into line, and demonstrate that the Labor government is one hundred per cent behind AUKUS."
He said there were also significant questions about the reasoning behind the shift to three used Virginia-class submarines.
"If it is the case, as [Richard Marles] says, that this will be cheaper and simpler — then why wasn't this the plan from the beginning?" he said.
The Greens have also called on the government to provide more details about the changed plans, arguing it lack transparency.
Greens Senator David Shoebridge said Labor should be asking questions about the pact.
"We're not just over a barrel with the United States — we have literally said to them they can name the price, they can give us the biggest lemon in the fleet — three of them — and Richard Marles will give that blank cheque to the US,"he said.
The renewed discussion of AUKUS within parliament comes as a group of AUKUS skeptics and critics launch a "public inquiry" into the pact.
The "AUKUS public inquiry", led by former Labor minister Peter Garrett, aims to mirror the processes of a parliamentary inquiry that the group argues should have taken place before the pact was agreed.
Mr Garrett and four others, including former Chief of the Defence Force Chris Barrie, will call for public submissions and hold hearings as they examine whether AUKUS is providing value for money and can be delivered at all.
Mr Garrett said public debate about the pact was sorely needed.
"The AUKUS decision is the most momentous and expensive decision ever made by any Australian government in the modern era," he said.
"It is a decision that asks all of us to fully understand the implications of what is contained in that decision.
"And to provide the opportunity for Australians across the political spectrum, and all walks of life, to be heard and submit to a public discussion about this massive expenditure."