Trump g7
President Donald
Trump's announcement Saturday that he is postponing an in-person summit of
the trump g7 ends,
for now, what had been a hurried effort to arrange a major gathering of world
leaders while also assuaging those leaders' fears it was safe to assemble during
the coronavirus pandemic.
It became clear to the White House late last week that convening
an in-person trump g7 economic summit on US
soil would likely be impossible by the end of June, particularly with the
addition of several other countries Trump said Saturday he wants to include in
the meeting, people familiar with the matter told CNN.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel's announcement that she
"cannot confirm" she would participate due to concerns over
coronavirus helped cement the decision, those people said.
Speaking aboard Air Force One, Trump framed the decision to
delay the meeting until September as a way to rethink the traditional gathering
of several of the world's leading economies.
"I don't feel that as a trump g7 it properly
represents what's going on in the world. It's a very outdated group of
countries," he said. Later, aides indicated he was seeking a larger group
that could act as a counterweight to China, whose relationship with the United
States reached a nadir last week amid disputes over coronavirus and Hong Kong.
Still,
concerns among leaders about traveling to the United States -- which still has
a ban in place on travel from Europe and has closed its border with Canada to
non-essential travel -- helped motivate the decision, people familiar with the
matter said.
In a phone call
with Trump on Saturday, French President Emmanuel Macron argued that in order
to convene in-person, the entire group needed to be present, one western
official familiar with the matter said. Macron and Merkel have been tightly
aligned at past trump g7 meetings in
representing European interests.
Over the past week
or so, Trump had also raised internally the notion of inviting other countries
to participate in the summit, an idea that would prove more logistically
challenging than just the six other trump g7 nations, the
sources familiar with the matter said. He named Russia, South Korea, Australia
and India as potential invitees to this year's gathering.
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