Modi meets Australian Opposition leader Angus Taylor, backs bipartisan India ties
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Friday, 10 July met Angus Taylor, Leader of the Opposition of Australia, in Melbourne, as part of his ongoing three-day official visit to the country. The two leaders held discussions aimed at deepening the India-Australia Comprehensive Strategic Partnership, with the meeting underscoring a rare cross-party consensus in Canberra on strengthening ties with New Delhi.
What the Meeting Covered
Ministry of External Affairs spokesperson Randhir Jaiswal shared details of the meeting on X, stating: 'Prime Minister Narendra Modi met Mr. Angus Taylor MP, Leader of the Opposition of Australia. They held productive discussions on the growing India-Australia Comprehensive Strategic Partnership.' Jaiswal further noted that 'the warm and cordial meeting reflected the strong bipartisan support in Australia for deepening ties with India.'
The meeting with Taylor is significant because it signals that India-Australia engagement is not contingent on which party holds power in Canberra — a strategic assurance for New Delhi as it deepens long-term institutional ties with Australia.
Modi's Packed Australia Schedule
The Taylor meeting is one of several high-level engagements during Prime Minister Modi's visit to Australia. He has already held bilateral talks with Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, met Governor-General Sam Mostyn and Victoria Governor Margaret Gardner AC, attended the Australia-India CEO Forum, participated in an Indian community reception in Melbourne, and met former Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison.
MCG Visit and Sports Roadmap
A centrepiece of the visit is a planned joint appearance by Modi and Albanese at the iconic Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG), where the two leaders are set to unveil an India-Australia sports collaboration roadmap. Foreign Secretary Vikram Misri, speaking at a media briefing on Thursday, said: 'Prime Minister Modi and Prime Minister Albanese will visit the iconic Melbourne Cricket Ground to highlight one of the other subjects, a growing sector of cooperation between the two countries which is sports and they will take this opportunity to unveil the India-Australia sports collaboration roadmap.'
Misri noted that sports has emerged as a particularly promising area of bilateral engagement, with India set to host the Commonwealth Games in 2030 and Australia preparing to host the Olympic Games in 2032. 'This sector promises to be one that can see a lot of cooperation and opportunities between the two sides,' he added.
Why Bipartisan Support Matters
India-Australia relations have evolved substantially over the past decade, graduating from a basic trade and diaspora relationship to a full-fledged Comprehensive Strategic Partnership — a status accorded to only a handful of countries by New Delhi. The fact that both the ruling Australian Labor Party under Albanese and the Opposition under Taylor have expressed support for deeper engagement with India reflects a durable consensus that transcends electoral cycles. This comes amid India's broader push to diversify strategic partnerships in the Indo-Pacific region.
What Comes Next
The sports roadmap to be unveiled at the MCG is expected to outline concrete areas of collaboration ahead of the two major global sporting events. Broader outcomes from the Australia-India CEO Forum and the bilateral summit with Albanese are also anticipated to be formalised in the coming weeks.