Donald Trump, G7
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Trump, travel ban
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Still, 61% of Japanese citizens say they have no confidence Trump will do the right thing on world affairs. The United Kingdom had slightly less confidence at 62%, while 68% of Italians had no confidence Trump would do the right thing.
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Latin Times on MSNTrump Plan Could Block Entry From 36 More Nations Over Security Concerns: ReportThe Trump administration is considering new entry bans for citizens of 36 countries on top of the 12 ones already banned earlier in June
President Trump opened his remarks at the Group of 7 gathering of industrialized nations by criticizing the decision to expel Russia from the bloc after Moscow’s 2014 “annexation” of Crimea.
Trump railed against former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau after that Group of Seven summit and threatened to yank the United States from a joint statement. The leaders fought over tariffs on steel and aluminum.
By Tim Kelly KANANASKIS, Alberta (Reuters) -Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba and U.S. President Donald Trump agreed to push ahead with trade talks on Monday, but failed to achieve a breakthrough that would lower or eliminate tariffs that threaten to hobble the Japanese economy.
Trump has long bet that he can scare allies into submission. But ahead of G-7, there are signs of pushback from world leaders who are 'increasingly willing to stand up to him.'
The Group of 7 nations and allies from around the world are heading to a summit in Alberta in Western Canada on Sunday.
US President Donald Trump and UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer will meet Monday as they work to finalize a trade pact between their two nations that would be the first such deal since the White House announced a string of punitive tariffs against countries worldwide.