Cyril Ramaphosa says he expects US President Donald Trump to attend the G20 Summit in Johannesburg later this year.
Cyril Ramaphosa says he expects US President Donald Trump to attend the G20 Summit in Johannesburg later this year. Image via X@lilomatic

Home » Cyril Ramaphosa ‘confident’ Donald Trump will attend G20 Summit

Cyril Ramaphosa ‘confident’ Donald Trump will attend G20 Summit

Cyril Ramaphosa says he anticipates US President Donald Trump will take part in the G20 Summit in Johannesburg later this year.

22-05-25 11:56
Cyril Ramaphosa says he expects US President Donald Trump to attend the G20 Summit in Johannesburg later this year.
Cyril Ramaphosa says he expects US President Donald Trump to attend the G20 Summit in Johannesburg later this year. Image via X@lilomatic

In a tense yet wide-ranging Oval Office meeting on Wednesday, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa stated that global cooperation through multilateral platforms like the G20 was one of the main topics he discussed with US President Donald Trump.

As the current holder of the rotating G20 presidency, Ramaphosa directly invited Trump to attend the upcoming summit set to take place in South Africa later this year.

Emphasising the symbolic and practical importance of US participation, Ramaphosa said he hoped to hand over the presidency “to a full chair, not an empty one.”

‘Needs to be there’

“We also discussed the G20 and we stressed that the G20, having been formed by the United States, of course, together with other countries, it is important that the United States should continue playing a key role,” Ramaphosa told reporters after the meeting.

“I want to hand over the Presidency of the G20 to President Trump in November, and I said he needs to be there.

“I don’t want to hand over the Presidency of the G20 to an empty chair. I want to hand it over to him, sitting in that chair in November, and he is going to give serious consideration to it.

“In fact, I expect him to come to South Africa,” he added.

The invitation comes amid a period of strained relations between the two countries, with disagreements over land reform, racial violence, and South Africa’s international positions.

Trump has so far refrained from engaging with several G20 processes under Ramaphosa’s chairmanship, and his administration has criticised Pretoria’s recent diplomatic stances, including its case against Israel at the International Court of Justice.

Still, Ramaphosa expressed hope that South Africa’s hosting of the G20 summit could mark a turning point in multilateral engagement and US-Africa relations.

The G20 summit, to be held in Johannesburg from 22-23 November, will bring together the world’s major economies to address pressing global challenges, including economic recovery, climate action, and international security.

A confirmed appearance by Donald Trump could signal a renewed commitment by the US to international cooperation under his administration.