Western Australian premier Roger Cook calls US vice-president JD Vance a ‘knob’

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Cook says ‘you’ve got to have one unprofessional moment’ as description wins applause at pre-election event

The Western Australian premier, Roger Cook, has called the US vice-president, JD Vance, a “knob”, wading into US politics at a pre-election event in Perth.

At the West Australian’s Leadership Matters event on Tuesday morning, at which Cook was the guest speaker, a journalist asked the premier to finish the sentence: “JD Vance is a …” Cook replied: “Knob.”

Cook then said: “You’ve got to have one unprofessional moment, don’t you? That was it.”

His description won him laughs and a round of applause from the audience.

Cook is vying for a third Labor term in office, with the state to go to the polls on Saturday.

WA is at the epicentre of the Aukus agreement, with ships from the US and UK arriving from 2027. The US Virginia-class submarines will be based in the state from the early 2030s.

Its base, HMAS Stirling, south of Perth, will receive up to $8bn from the federal government to support infrastructure needed for the incoming nuclear-powered submarines.

At Tuesday’s event, Cook was asked whether the Trump administration represents “a dark road” for the world. Cook responded that the new US president does bring uncertainty.

“Well, I certainly think he represents an uncertain one, so again let me just say in times of uncertainty you need a steady hand, experienced hand at the wheel.”

The federal treasurer, Jim Chalmers, was asked to respond to Cook’s comments, and said he would have chosen “different words”.

“It’s up to Roger Cook to choose his own words,” he told reporters in Brisbane. “I would [have] chose different words … I’m not making any judgments about the words that Roger chose.”

The Nationals leader, David Littleproud, told ABC’s Afternoon Briefing he thought the comments were not “helpful”.

“While I don’t agree with what transpired in the Oval Office, I respect the sovereignty of the United States, I understand the frustration in spending a lot of money in Ukraine and they want to see peace.”

He added it was “not how Australia or our government would undertake a diplomatic meeting or press conference”.

Vance has faced public criticism in the US after his meeting with Donald Trump and Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Friday, and his combative tone towards Ukraine’s president.

The Trump administration announced on Tuesday it would pause aid to Ukraine, according to reports.

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