‘In-person’ G7 more effective, but deal with safety concerns first, Trudeau says
WASHINGTON — Gathering the leaders of seven of the world’s largest economies in person would be “much more effective” than the virtual alternative, Justin Trudeau said Wednesday — so long as the United States has a plan to deal with the potential COVID-19 risk.
The notion of G7 leaders attending a physical meeting somewhere between the White House and Camp David, even in the midst of a global pandemic that continues to batter the national capital, began last week as another outlandish sentiment from Donald Trump’s Twitter feed.
But an in-person meeting in late June now seems a real possibility — one the prime minister said he’s prepared to entertain, as long as the Trump administration takes the necessary steps to ensure public health concerns are properly addressed.
“There are significant health preoccupations that we have around holding an in-person meeting, but there’s no question that in-person meetings, in an ideal situation, are much more effective than even virtual meetings,” Trudeau said.


