At state visit, Biden and Macron face dispute over American subsidies
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[December 01, 2022]
By Steve Holland and Michel Rose
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Joe Biden and French President
Emmanuel Macron will celebrate more than 200 years of U.S.-French
relations on Thursday but simmering in the background is a dispute over
new American subsidies that has riled Europe.
Biden is hosting Macron at the first state visit since the U.S. leader
took office in early 2021. Biden and his wife Jill are playing up the
pageantry with a colorful arrival ceremony planned and 200 live lobsters
flown in from Maine for a glittering state dinner.
The two leaders are to hold talks then conduct a joint news conference
at 11:45 a.m. EST (1645 GMT). Macron and his wife, Brigitte, arrived in
Washington on Tuesday for his second state visit to the United States
since taking office in 2017.
Biden, 80, and Macron, 44, have had many meetings at international
gatherings but this will be the most amount of time they have spent in
each other's company.
The two leaders dined together on Wednesday night at an Italian
restaurant called Fiola Mare in the historic Georgetown area in a
gesture of bonhomie.
Macron is expected to raise French and European concerns about subsidies
in Biden's Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), a $430 billion bill that
offers massive subsidies for U.S.-made products and is aimed at
addressing the climate crisis.
European leaders say the legislative package signed by Biden in August
is unfair to non-American companies and would be a serious blow to their
economies as Europe deals with the fallout from Russia's February
invasion of Ukraine.
In a meeting on Wednesday with U.S. lawmakers at the Library of
Congress, Macron said the act was "super aggressive" toward European
companies, one participant told Reuters on condition of anonymity.
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U.S. President Joe Biden and French
President Emmanuel Macron walk next to vehicles as they meet for
dinner at Fiola Mare restaurant in the Georgetown neighborhood of
Washington, U.S., November 30, 2022. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein
Macron told the French community in Washington that the cost of the
war in Ukraine was much higher in Europe than in the United States
and that Europe risked falling behind if the subsidies siphoned new
investments. This could "fragment the West," he said.
There was no sign that Biden was prepared to make concessions.
White House spokesperson Karine Jean-Pierre said the legislation
"presents significant opportunities for European firms as well as
benefits to EU energy security," when asked about European concerns.
Macron is the first foreign leader to be given a state dinner at the
Biden White House, a sign of his importance to Washington despite
some differences with the Biden administration.
The formal dinner in a pavilion on the White House South Lawn will
feature music from Jon Batiste, Chardonnay from the Napa Valley and
cheeses from Oregon, California and Wisconsin.
Russia's invasion of Ukraine will most likely be a major topic in
the talks. Both leaders have sought to bolster support for the
Ukrainian military.
Macron's visit came as NATO ministers met in Bucharest and pledged
more aid to Ukraine to help against Russia's attacks on energy
infrastructure as winter bites.
The alliance, of which the United States and France are founding
members, was also discussing how to address challenges posed by
China's military buildup and its cooperation with Russia, U.S.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken said. Macron has said in the past
that China should not be a focus for NATO.
(Reporting By Steve Holland and Michel Rose; Additional reporting by
Jeff Mason)
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