Trump, Xi to face reporters but not planning to take questions

President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping on Thursday will face reporters here together for the first time.

But the two leaders — the first, a vocal critic of the press and the other an enforcer of strict media censorship — are not expected to take questions from reporters as they face cameras in a side by side appearance in the Great Hall of the People.

Trump engaged in joint news conferences with the leaders of Japan and South Korea in his first two stops in Asia, but in China — one of the most repressive media environments in the world — Trump and Xi are slated to simply deliver statements.

Trump will be the first US President to not hold a joint news conference with his Chinese counterpart in his first visit here since President George H.W. Bush.

The two leaders will address the world Thursday amid their second-ever series of top-level discussions. The focus so far has been the trading relationship between the two countries, North Korea’s ongoing development of nuclear and ballistic missile capabilities and a slew of other pressing issues. The two leaders held their first direct talks during Xi’s visit to Mar-a-Lago, Trump’s south Florida property, last spring.

The Chinese have sought to “wow” Trump with pageantry and elaborate displays as part of what they have termed a “state visit, plus.”

Trump arrived Thursday for his first full day with an oversized state welcome at the Great Hall of the People, the cavernous government structure on the western edge of Tiananmen Square.

He and the first lady emerged from their limousine to an elaborate show of flattery, with horn players heralding Trump’s arrival for a day of extended talks with his Chinese counterpart.

Trump and Xi surveyed Chinese military bands from a canopied platform and greeted cheering schoolchildren, who waved colored pom-poms as the President strode past.

It was the second major show of welcome for Trump, who arrived in Beijing on Wednesday and was shuttled to the Forbidden City for a rare personal tour by Xi.

The outsized welcome is becoming de rigueur for foreign leaders eager to appeal to Trump’s own sense of importance. But underpinning Xi’s displays are a flex of Chinese power as he positions his country as an economic rival to the United States.

Hoping for a muscle flex himself on trade, Trump oversaw the inking of billions of dollars in business agreements between American and Chinese firms, though details of the deals were not immediately available from the White House or the Commerce Department.

Trump has used similar signing ceremonies during past foreign visits to demonstrate an ability to negotiate agreements that benefit American workers. But many of the accords have been in the works long before Trump entered office.

Speaking ahead of talks with Xi, Trump accused past administrations of allowing China to lead on trade.

“You are representing China, but it is too bad that past administrations allowed it to get so far out of kilter. But we’ll make it fair and it will be tremendous for both of us,” he said.

Every US President since Bill Clinton has convinced his Chinese counterpart to take questions from reporters during his first state visit to China. Clinton in 1998, George W. Bush in 2002 and Barack Obama in 2009.

But American reporters covering US presidential visits to Beijing have had mixed success in questioning leaders here.

In 2014, President Barack Obama appeared to score a diplomatic win by convincing Xi — then in office for two years — to conduce a joint news conference on the sidelines of the APEC summit.

But once inside the Great Hall of the People — the same building where Trump and Xi will appear on Thursday — it became clear that Xi wasn’t interested in touchy questions about his government’s openness.

Asked by a US journalist about Chinese visa restrictions for American reporters, Xi initially appeared reluctant to answer, standing in an awkward silence as Obama turned to hear his answer with a look of bemused anticipation.

Xi turned instead to a softball question from a government-run newspaper. But he made a harsh return to the question of press freedoms during his answer.

“Media outlets need to obey China’s laws and regulations,” Xi said. “When a car breaks down on the road, perhaps we need to get off the car to see where the problem lies. And when a certain issue is raised as a problem, there must be a reason.”

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