Lodi News-Sentinel

White House: Trump ‘evolving’ on climate action

- By Julie Pace and Jonathan Lemire

TAORMINA, Italy — Forceful face-toface talks this week with fellow world leaders left President Donald Trump “more knowledgea­ble” and with “evolving” views about the global climate accord he’s threatened to abandon, a top White House official said Friday. Trump also was impressed by their arguments about how crucial U.S. leadership is in supporting internatio­nal efforts.

The president’s new apparent openness to staying in the landmark Paris climate pact came amid a determined pressure campaign by European leaders. During Friday’s gathering of the Group of 7 wealthy democracie­s — as well as at earlier stops on Trump’s first internatio­nal trip — leaders have implored him to stick with the 2015 accord aimed at reducing carbon emissions and slowing potentiall­y disastrous global warming.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the G-7 leaders “put forward very many arguments” for the U.S. sticking with the agreement. And by Friday evening, White House economic adviser Gary Cohn said Trump’s views were indeed “evolving.”

“He feels much more knowledgea­ble on the topic today,” Cohn said. “He came here to learn, he came here to get smarter.”

While those comments were remarkable given Trump’s fierce criticism of the Paris deal as a candidate, they were also in keeping with his emerging pattern as president. A novice in internatio­nal affairs, Trump has been surprising­ly candid about the impact his conversati­ons with world leaders have had in shaping his views on numerous issues.

He backed away from his tough campaign talk about trade with China after a summit with President Xi Jinping. And he abandoned his criticism of Saudi Arabia’s human rights record following his warm welcome in the desert kingdom this week.

On Friday, G-7 leaders appeared to take a page out of the playbook other countries have followed, emphasizin­g America’s unrivaled influence on the world stage. Cohn told reporters that Trump was struck by “how important it is for the United States to show leadership” and how even in massive internatio­nal agreements, there’s “a big gap when you take the biggest economy out.”

White House National Security Adviser H.R. McMaster quickly jumped in to assert that Trump would make his decisions based “on what’s best for the American people,” hewing to the “America First” policy that energized the president’s supporters during last year’s election campaign.

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