Politics

Trump cancels June G7 meeting at Camp David over coronavirus

U.S. President Donald Trump will cancel an in-person meeting of G7 leaders at Camp David in June  because of the coronavirus and will hold a videoconference  instead, the White House said on Thursday.

White House says leaders will meet by videoconference instead

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison, U.S. President Donald Trump, French President Emmanuel Macron, Chilean President Sebastian Pinera, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Indian Prime Minster Narendra Modi attend the summit family photo session for G7 leaders and invited guests in Biarritz, France in 2019. (Christian Hartmann/Reuters)

U.S. President Donald Trump will cancel an in-person meeting of G7 leaders at Camp David in June because of the coronavirus and will hold a videoconference instead, the White House said on Thursday.

The decision comes as nations around the world seal their borders and ban travel to stop the virus' spread.

Trump held a videoconference with the leaders of the world's major industrialized countries earlier this week and plans to repeat that in April, May and June, when the physical meeting at the presidential retreat in Maryland was scheduled to take place.

White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow, who also serves as Trump's G7 "sherpa," has informed his counterparts about the move.

"In order for each country to focus all of its resources on responding to the health and economic challenges of COVID-19 and at President Trump's direction, National Economic Council Director and U.S. Sherpa for the 2020 G7 Larry Kudlow has informed his Sherpa colleagues that the G7 Leaders' Summit the U.S. was set to host in June at Camp David will now be done by video-teleconference," White House spokesman Judd Deere said in a statement to Reuters.

"The White House also informed the other G7 members that in  order to continue close coordination, the President will convene the Leaders via video teleconference in April and May just as he did this week," he said.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks with G7 leaders during a teleconference while under self-isolation, due to his wife Sophie Gregoire testing positive for novel coronavirus, in his residence at Rideau Cottage in Ottawa earlier this week. (Submitted/Prime Minister's Office)

The White House views the change as part of mitigation efforts to fight the virus. Countries normally send large delegations with their leaders to G7 summits and journalists from around the world convene to cover their meeting as well.

Trump had intended to focus the G7 meeting on the economy, eschewing traditional topics that often top the agenda such as climate change. He initially planned to host the leaders' group at one of his properties in Florida but cancelled those plans after criticism that he would profit financially from the meeting.

The G7 is made up of the United States, Canada, Italy, Japan, France, Germany, Britain as well as the European Union. Trump irritated Europe by instituting a travel ban on its citizens without first alerting European leaders. Europe has become the epicenter of the coronavirus. 
 

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