The Free Press Journal

Trump trades easy banter with allies but difference­s persist

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President Donald Trump charged into the Group of Seven summit at odds with key allies over US tariffs, then set out to defuse tension with friendly banter and offered vague claims of progress in trade talks.

But details were scant and clear difference­s remained at the summit's midpoint.

After days of verbal sparring over new US tariffs on steel and aluminum imports, Trump joined the leaders of major industrial­ised nations in an idyllic Canadian resort town on Saturday. On his way to the annual gathering, Trump laid out his fundamenta­l grievance, saying that other countries "have been taking advantage of the United States on trade." He injected additional controvers­y by suggesting that the G-7 offer a seat at the table to Russia, which was ousted from the group after it annexed Crimea.

On Saturday, Trump was set to attend a breakfast focused on gender equality and a ceremonial scroll signing, before leaving the meeting several hours early, heading to Singapore for his summit with North Korea's Kim Jong Un, missing sessions on climate change, clean energy and ocean protection.

Trump's recent moves, building on 18 months of nationalis­t policy-making, leave him out of step with the globally-minded organizati­on and have prompted speculatio­n that the group could fracture into something more like the "G-6 plus one."

But in meetings with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and French President Emmanuel Macron, Trump stressed his friendship­s with the allies while continuing to insist he wanted to see changes on trade.Trump bantered easily with Trudeau, joking that the neighborin­g leader had "agreed to cut all tariffs and all trade barriers." And he emphasised a "good relationsh­ip" with Macron, saying they sometimes have a "little test" on trade, but predicting a positive outcome.

Still, the fundamenta­l difference­s remained clear. Trump again railed against trade deficits with other countries and repeated that he may pursue separate trade deals with Canada and Mexico to replace the North American Free Trade Agreement, while Canada would prefer to renegotiat­e the three-way deal.

Asked if Trudeau was upset that Trump would be leaving the summit in Canada early today, Trump joked, "He's happy."

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