Is Donald Trump heading to Australia this year? Thousands of Australians sign petition calling on Scott Morrison to stop him from visiting as rumours swirl he could be coming Down Under Nearly 5,300 people have asked Scott Morrison to revoke his invitation to Trump The petition said the President of the United States had dangerous values It is argued that a petition in the UK with 1.8m signatures stopped Trumps visitBy Stephen Johnson and Tom Place For Daily Mail Australia Published: 13:00 BST, 4 June 2019 | Updated: 23:20 BST, 4 June 2019 310 shares 38 Viewcomments Thousands of people have signed a petition calling on Prime Minister Scott Morrison to stop Donald Trump from visiting Australia amid rumours he is heading Down Under. The petition with almost 5,300 signatures argued the U.S. President held values contrary to Australia's and morals that were 'dangerous' - despite the fact he is the Commander-in-Chief of Australia's biggest defence ally. 'Scott Morrison must immediately rescind Trump's invitation,' it said on Megaphone. 'His horrific treatment of migrant children, his advocacy for the gun lobby, his treatment of women and his history of dangerously divisive political rhetoric is not welcome in Australia.' Thousands of people have signed a petition calling on the Prime Minister Scott Morrison to stop Donald Trump visiting Australia, the pair met for the first time in December 2018 at a G20 summit The petition noted 1.8million people added their names to a similar motion to ban Trump from visiting the UK that was then presented to its Parliament. 'Under pressure and not wanting to be embarrassed, President Trump cancelled his scheduled visit,' it said. President Trump may be considering a visit to Australia now that Mr Morrison's Coalition government has been re-elected for a third consecutive term. Like President Trump in November 2016, Mr Morrison is a conservative leader who won last month's election against the predictions of opinion polls. The Republican leader of the United States tweeted a note of congratulations to Mr Morrison in the early hours of May 19. 'Congratulations to Scott on a GREAT WIN!' he wrote. Had former Labor leader Bill Shorten prevailed at the polls, President Trump would have had to reacquaint himself with the third Australian PM during he was sworn in. Mr Morrison met President Trump for the first time at the Argentina G20 summit in November 2018 and asked about the man he had replaced, Malcolm Turnbull. The petition with almost 5,300 signatures said President Trump carries values contrary to Australia and that his behaviour and morals were dangerous Read more: Share or comment on this article: All rights reserved for this news site dailymail and under his responsibility