The Maui News

Biden winds up G-20 summit with dings at Russia, China

- By ZEKE MILLER and JOSH BOAK The Associated Press

ROME — President Joe Biden wrapped up his time at the Group of 20 summit on Sunday trying to convince Americans and the wider world that he’s got things under control — and taking Russia, China and Saudi Arabia to task for not doing enough to deal with the existentia­l threat of climate change.

Biden’s overall take on his efforts: On climate change, he’s got $900 billion planned for renewable energy, and Congress will vote this coming week. On supply chains, he has plans to make the ports run better and tamp down inflation. For workers, he’s building an economy with pay raises. On diplomacy, world leaders trust him.

But he also acknowledg­ed what he can’t yet achieve: bringing Russia, China and Saudi Arabia to the table with the broader internatio­nal community to limit carbon emissions and move to renewable energy.

In a news conference Sunday, the U.S. president spelled out his belief that all politics is personal and that what progress was achieved at the Rome summit came from direct interactio­ns with other leaders.

“They know me. I know them,” Biden said of his fellow G-20 leaders. “We get things done together.”

“We’ve made significan­t progress and more has to be done,” Biden added. “But it’s going to require us to continue to focus on what Russia’s not doing, what China’s not doing, what Saudi Arabia’s not doing.”

For all the challenges confrontin­g him, the president attempted to stay optimistic. As Biden departed the news conference, he offered a thumbs up when asked if West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin and Arizona Sen. Kyrsten Sinema — key Democratic votes — were on board with his $1.75 trillion spending package for families, health care and renewable energy. The president also shrugged off his recent decline in the polls, saying that numbers go up and down.

As for the potential significan­ce of Biden’s thumbs-up on congressio­nal negotiatio­ns, White House deputy press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre, said, “As the President said during the press conference, he is confident we are going to get this done and the thumbs up was simply a visual restatemen­t of that.”

But the policy issues also seemed to fade for Biden when asked about his time Friday with Pope Francis. The president became deeply emotional, his hands appearing to fiddle with the mask he wore as a precaution because of COVID19. He spoke of how the pope comforted the Biden family in a Philadelph­ia airport hangar after the death of his son, Beau, in 2015.

“When I won, (Pope Francis) called me to tell me how much he appreciate­d the fact that I would focus on the poor,

focus on the needs of people who are in trouble,” Biden said. “He is everything I learned about Catholicis­m from the time I was a kid going from grade school to high school.”

The president did leave the G-20 with commitment­s by his fellow leaders on a global minimum tax that would make it harder for large companies to avoid taxes by assigning their profits to countries with low tax rates. He announced new funding to improve ports and shipping, in addition to a conference next year on supply chains. He patched up difference­s with the European Union on tariffs and difference­s with France on the sale of a nuclear-powered submarines to Australia.

The president met Sunday with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, whose office said the meeting was held in a “positive atmosphere” despite tensions over human rights and Turkey’s purchase of a Russian missile system, among other issues.

Biden heads today to the U.N. climate summit in Scotland, where he’ll once again face questions about whether the world’s wealthiest are doing enough to stop the warming of the Earth by moving away from fossil fuels. The president on Sunday dismissed the contradict­ion that he’s fighting for climate change while also asking oil-rich countries to increase their production in order to lower gasoline prices for U.S. commuters.

“The idea that we’re not going to need gasoline for automobile­s is just not realistic,” Biden said. “It has a profound impact on workingcla­ss families, just to get back and forth to work. So I don’t see anything inconsiste­nt with that.”

 ?? AP photo ?? President Joe Biden hosts an event about global supply chains during the G20 leaders summit, Sunday, in Rome.
AP photo President Joe Biden hosts an event about global supply chains during the G20 leaders summit, Sunday, in Rome.

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