Who is Roger Cook, the Australian politician who called JD Vance a knob? | JD Vance

With an answer from one word to a question of four words, Australian politician Roger Cook set out A wave of addresses He may hope that the White House’s attention will not attract.
During the “Complete Completion” game with a journalist on Tuesday, the Prime Minister Western Australia He was asked: “JD Vance is …”
He answered “Daqab”, he answered categorically, prompting laughter and applause from a group of business leaders mostly in the state capital, Perth.
At least in this context-he is the Australian and British colloquial of a penis, indicating that Cook is not the biggest fans of the Vice President of Donald Trump.
(In fact, the public broadcaster in Australia, ABC, was a title on his website Word bleeding – “Kn*B”.)
The Prime Minister later apologized for the comment, saying that it was “a light and unconscious moment and I did not mean any crime,” heading to any diplomatic reaction from Washington.
So, who is Roger Cook?
The 59 -year -old is the Prime Minister of the Work Party in Western Australia, and the giant Western state in Australia known for its virgin sandy beaches, rich metal deposits and oral politicians (sometimes).
Western Australia coincides with the homeland and the shipbuilding industry, which will be at the heart of the AUKUS Nuclear Deal between Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States.
Cook He went to the state elections on SaturdayThe four-year vote is expected to win his party comfortably-and such words may only be loved by the voters.
The Labor Party holds 53 out of 59 seats in the state parliament after the 2021 landslide elections built on the popularity of the predecessor of Cook, Mark McGuan, who transformed the famous country into the hermit kingdom during the Covid-19s.
The word Cook Valic is not the first time that he criticized the Maga leadership.
Before the American election last November, the Prime Minister said that Trump represents a “dark path” for the world.
Cook was more diplomatic when he was asked on Tuesday if he still kept this opinion, saying: “I definitely think it represents an inaccurate [road]”.