WASHINGTON (AP) â The relationship between U.S. President Donald Trump and French President Emmanuel Macron started simply enough, with a handshake, nearly a decade ago.
But even then, there were signs of strain in their relationship â tensions that could be on full display during next weekâs G7 summit in France.
Back in 2017, Trump was a brash businessman just elected to Americaâs most powerful office, and Macron was an upstart politician who had won his race in a landslide. At a NATO summit in Brussels, they clinched hands far longer than most people do when they meet for the first time. Neither seemed to want to be the first to break a grip so tight that it exposed white knuckles.
Nevertheless, a friendship was born. And early on, Macron seemed to be the one European leader with a knack for managing his mercurial, three-decades-older counterpart.
Macron invited the Republican president to join him for Bastille Day celebrations in July 2017, including an Eiffel Tower dinner date with their wives. Trump reciprocated by making Macron the guest of honor the following year at his first White House state dinner, the highest diplomatic honor the United States can extend to an ally.
But by the end of Trumpâs first term, the bromance had faded. And in his second term, the leaders now openly trade barbs, disagreeing over tariffs, Ukraine and the Iran war. That dynamic will be scrutinized next week when Trump and the leaders of Britain, Canada, Germany, Italy and Japan join Macron in the French lakeside resort of Evian-les-Bains for the G7 summit.
Trumpâs long-simmering frustrations with US allies could be on display
There could be awkward moments between Trump and Macron, as well as among Trump and the other G7 leaders heâs criticized for not joining him in Iran.
âBut I also think European leaders are quite professionals when it comes to politics, and in some ways diplomacy at this point, and will maybe see it as an opportunity as well,â Max Bergmann, director of the Europe, Russia, and Eurasia Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, said in an interview.
Kurt Volker, a former U.S. ambassador to NATO, said the Trump-Macron relationship has been further complicated by the Iran war and Trumpâs complaints âthat Europeans werenât helping, when they hadnât been consulted, and their interests are very much affected by this.â
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âI think that was a negative for Macron,â Volker said.
Trump joined Israel in a war against Iran over its nuclear program back in February without consulting other U.S. allies. He then complained publicly when European countries spurned his requests for their help.
Waning support for Ukraine in its war against Russia from the Trump administration âhas really irritated the French,â Volker said. âThey feel this is important and weâre not paying attention to it.â Macron invited Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy to join the leadersâ discussions on Tuesday.
Macron is the G7 member who has dealt with Trump the longest
In Trumpâs first term, Macron appeared confident that he could persuade and influence the U.S. leader, but the relationship increasingly has come to be defined by their disagreements.
Macron now says he is âcarefulâ about Trumpâs statements, suggesting he no longer takes them at face value. Their relationship remains cordial as each calls the other âmy friend.â But the relationship has also experienced some ups and downs.
As president-elect, Trump attended the reopening of Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris in late 2024 at Macronâs invitation. After Trump began his second term in 2025, Macron was an early Oval Office visitor. The president wrote on social media that he was âdelightedâ to welcome Macron back to the White House and said the relationship with France has been âvery special.â
But at one point during the meeting, the French president publicly corrected Trump after he wrongly suggested that Europe would recover the money it had provided to support Ukraine. With a smile, Macron touched Trumpâs forearm and replied, âWe provided real money.â
Macron also condemned as âbrutal and unfoundedâ new tariffs that Trump slapped on steel, aluminum and a broader range of European imports in early 2025.
But there have also been some lighter moments mixed with the tensions.
A documentary aired last year on French television showed Macron telling Trump during a phone call that Zelenskyy had agreed to a U.S.-backed ceasefire proposal. Trump replied, âYouâre the greatest.â
Macron has often said he can reach Trump directly whenever he needs to â and proved his point during last yearâs U.N. General Assembly session in New York. After police officers blocked the French leader from crossing a street because traffic had been halted for Trumpâs motorcade, Macron whipped out his cellphone and dialed the U.S. president.
âHow are you?â Macron said. âGuess what? Iâm waiting in the street because everything is frozen for you!â
âThis is not a show,â Macron has said about Trumpâs NATO ambiguity
Macron has argued that Trumpâs âAmerica firstâ policies bolstered his case for a stronger European defense capability that would lessen reliance on the United States.
In April of this year, as Trump sent mixed signals about Washingtonâs commitment to NATO after the start of the war in Iran, Macron delivered some of his sharpest criticism of the U.S. president.
âThere is too much talk, and itâs going in all directions,â Macron said. âWe all need stability, calm and a return to peace. This is not a show.â
âYou have to be serious, and when you want to be serious, you donât say the opposite every day of what you said the day before,â he said.
Trump, while mimicking a French accent, recently has taken to reenacting a conversation he says he had with Macron over drug prices and tariffs. Trump also poked Macron by telling a private luncheon in April that his wife, Brigitte Macron, treats her husband badly. The comments were in a video the White House had posted on its YouTube channel before blocking access.
Macron didnât see any humor in Trumpâs comments. âThe remarks I heard were neither elegant nor appropriate,â he said. âThey do not deserve a response.â
Still, Macron has tried to accommodate Trumpâs schedule to ensure his presence at the summit in Evian-les-Bains, knowing that he has a record of leaving such gatherings early.
Macron originally had set Sunday, which is Trumpâs 80th birthday, as the opening day of the summit, but he pushed the start back a day because Trump is celebrating the occasion with a UFC show staged on the White House grounds.
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Corbet reported from Paris.

