Home news G7 summit to start amid Trump trade tensions and Iran-Israel crisis – US politics live | US news

G7 summit to start amid Trump trade tensions and Iran-Israel crisis – US politics live | US news

by wellnessfitpro

G7 to start amid Trump trade tensions and Iran-Israel crisis

Good morning and welcome to our US politics blog

When Donald Trump last came to Canada for a G7 summit, the enduring image was of him seated with his arms folded defiantly as then-German Chancellor Angela Merkel stared daggers at him.

Donald Trump with other world leaders including Angela Merkel at the G7 in Canada in 2018
Donald Trump with other world leaders including Angela Merkel at the G7 in Canada in 2018 Photograph: Jesco Denzel/AP

If there is a shared mission at this year’s G7 summit, which begins Monday in Canada’s Rocky Mountains, it is a desire to minimize any fireworks at a moment of combustible tensions.
Trump already has hit several dozen nations with severe tariffs that risk a global economic slowdown. There is little progress on settling the wars in Ukraine and Gaza and now a new and escalating conflict between Israel and Iran over Tehran’s nuclear program.

Add to all of that the problems of climate change, immigration, drug trafficking, new technologies such as artificial intelligence and China’s continued manufacturing superiority and chokehold on key supply chains.

So it looks like the Trump, and the leaders of Japan, France, the United Kingdom, Italy, Germany and Canada are in for a busy time.

Stay with us for all the developments:

In other news:

Share

Key events

As Republican senators consider President Donald Trump’s big bill that could slash federal spending and extend tax cuts, a new survey shows most U.S. adults don’t think the government is overspending on the programs the GOP has focused on cutting, like Medicaid and food stamps.

Americans broadly support increasing or maintaining existing levels of funding for popular safety net programs, including Social Security and Medicare, according to the poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. They’re more divided on spending around the military and border security, and most think the government is spending too much on foreign aid.

The poll points to a disconnect between Republicans’ policy agenda and public sentiment around the domestic programs that are up for debate in the coming weeks.

A view of an agenda with the words “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” printed on it, on the day of a House Rules Committee’s hearing on U.S. President Donald Trump’s plan for extensive tax cuts, on Capitol Hill, in Washington, D.C., U.S., May 21, 2025. Photograph: Nathan Howard/Reuters
Share

Updated at 

#summit #start #Trump #trade #tensions #IranIsrael #crisis #politics #live #news

You may also like

Leave a Comment