The Niagara Falls Review

Trump and Putin joke of election meddling

The G20 exchange echoed a moment of Trump’s presidency

- JONATHAN LEMIRE AND ZEKE MILLER

OSAKA, JAPAN — Smiling together on a global stage, Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin cheerfully dismissed Russian interferen­ce in U.S. elections, shared their contempt for the world’s news media and generally flaunted their personal bond on Friday.

That was one day after the Russian leader praised the president of the United States for his nationalis­t world views and vigorously declared the days of the West’s liberals are dying if not already dead.

For some time, Trump has defied the once-entrenched Republican distrust if not outright hatred of the powerful nation at the heart of the former Soviet Union. But Friday’s joint appearance seemed to go even further.

As the two leaders sat down for their first meeting in nearly a year, a reporter asked Trump if he would warn Putin not to meddle in the upcoming 2020 U.S. election.

“Of course,” the president replied. Then he turned to Putin and facetiousl­y said, “Don’t meddle in the election.” He playfully repeated the request while pointing at Putin, who laughed.

The exchange at the Group of 20 summit in Osaka echoed one of the defining moments of Trump’s presidency from a year ago in Helsinki, Finland. There, Trump pointedly did not admonish Putin about election interferen­ce and did not side with U.S. intelligen­ce agencies over his Russian counterpar­t.

Putin disputes special counsel Robert Mueller’s conclusion that Russia interfered in the 2016 U.S. election to help Trump win. Putin told the Financial Times this week that it was “mythical interferen­ce.”

“What happened in reality? Mr. Trump looked into his opponents’ attitude to him and saw changes in American society, and he took advantage of this,” Putin told the newspaper.

Putin, who has highlighte­d populist movements in Europe and the U.S., praised Trump for trying to stem the flow of migrants and drugs from Mexico and expressed a view that liberalism — the main political ideology in the West since the end of the Second World War — has outlived its days.

“This liberal idea presuppose­s that nothing needs to be done — that migrants can kill, plunder and rape with impunity because their rights as migrants have to be protected,” Putin said, playing into issues Trump is emphasizin­g in his re-election campaign.

“The liberal idea has become obsolete,” he said in the interview.

The two leaders also bonded Friday over their mutual disdain for “fake news.”

Trump eyed the reporters at a photo opportunit­y with the Russian leader and told him, “Get rid of them, fake news. You don’t have the problem in Russia. We have it; you don’t have it.”

Putin responded, “Yes, yes, we have it. The same.”

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