In
May as the coronavirus pandemic was spreading, Trump postponed a
G7 summit he had hoped to hold in June until September or later,
and said he hoped to expand the list of invitees to include
Australia, Russia, South Korea and India.
"I'm much more inclined to do it sometime after the election.
... We could do it through teleconference or we could do it
through a meeting," the Republican president said at White House
news conference.
Trump, who is trailing Democratic candidate Joe Biden in opinion
polls ahead of the Nov. 3 election, said he had decided on the
new time frame because it would provide a "better, calmer
atmosphere to have a G7."
Trump gave no specific date and said no invitations had been
sent out.
Asked whether he would invite Putin, Trump said: "I don't know
but we have invited a number of people to the meeting. I
certainly would invite him to the meeting."
In a telephone conversation on June 1, Trump and Putin discussed
"progress toward convening the G7," according to the White
House.
The G7 includes Germany, France, Britain, Italy, Japan and
Canada in addition to the United States. Russia was expelled
from the then so-called G8 group in 2014 after annexing the
Crimea region from Ukraine.
(Reporting by Jeff Mason and Alexandra Alper; Editing by Chris
Reese and Sandra Maler)
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