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    Home » South Africa Braces for US Exclusion from G20 Under Trump Presidency
    ECONOMY

    South Africa Braces for US Exclusion from G20 Under Trump Presidency

    November 26, 2025
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    Bloomberg is reporting that South Africa anticipates an imminent formal notification from the United States barring its officials from engaging in Group of 20 discussions throughout Washington’s upcoming presidency, a development that would escalate an already acrimonious diplomatic standoff between the two nations. Insiders close to the negotiations in Pretoria, speaking on condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the matter, indicate that the decision could manifest through visa denials for South African delegates slated for the myriad preparatory and ministerial sessions over the next year.

    This prospective isolation follows the Trump administration’s outright boycott of the recent G20 leaders’ summit in Johannesburg—the first hosted on African soil—where Pretoria forged ahead with a declaration on climate action and inequality despite vehement US opposition, as detailed by Reuters. The forum, which encompasses 19 major economies alongside the European Union and African Union, commands 85 per cent of global GDP and 75 per cent of international trade, rendering such exclusions a potent tool in geopolitical brinkmanship.

    The rift traces back to early 2025, when President Donald Trump revived discredited narratives of a “white genocide” in South Africa, falsely linking land reform policies—aimed at redressing apartheid-era inequities where white minorities still hold 72 per cent of farmland—to racial violence and expropriation without compensation. These claims, amplified during a tense May White House meeting between Trump and South African President Cyril Ramaphosa, prompted the US to prioritise Afrikaner refugee admissions and expel Pretoria’s ambassador, plunging bilateral relations to their nadir since 1994. Trump’s administration lambasted South Africa’s G20 agenda—centred on “solidarity, equality, and sustainability”—as “anti-American DEI and climate activism,” with Secretary of State Marco Rubio skipping ministerial gatherings as early as February. By November, the boycott extended to the entire US delegation, including Vice President JD Vance, leaving an “empty chair” at the Johannesburg table and Argentina’s far-right President Javier Milei abstaining in solidarity.

    Undeterred, Ramaphosa’s team rallied the remaining 18 members to adopt the declaration at the summit’s outset—a procedural rarity—committing to enhanced debt relief for climate-vulnerable nations, green energy transitions, and critical mineral access for the Global South. French President Emmanuel Macron and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen voiced robust support, with Macron embracing Ramaphosa in a show of multilateral defiance. The White House decried the move as “weaponising” the presidency, while Ramaphosa dismissed the snub as “their loss,” underscoring America’s forfeiting influence in a bloc where emerging markets now drive 60 per cent of growth projections through 2030. The ceremonial gavel handover, traditionally symbolising continuity, dissolved into farce: Pretoria rejected sending the presidency to a low-level US chargé d’affaires, opting instead for a subdued diplomat-to-diplomat exchange at its foreign ministry, as reported by The Guardian.

    Prospects for South Africa’s ouster from the G20 loom larger, with Washington reportedly eyeing a Central European replacement—potentially Poland or Hungary—to align with Trump’s affinities, though such a reconfiguration demands unanimous consent among members, mirroring the 2023 consensus that elevated the African Union to permanent status at India’s behest. That inclusion, brokered by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, amplified Africa’s voice for 55 nations and 1.4 billion people, yet analysts warn unilateral US manoeuvres could fracture the forum’s legitimacy, inviting reciprocal boycotts of the 2026 summit at Trump’s Doral golf resort in Florida. Bilateral trade, valued at USD 20 billion annually with the US as South Africa’s second-largest partner, now hangs in the balance, compounded by disputes over Pretoria’s ICJ case against Israel and affirmative action policies.

    For Ramaphosa, whose administration navigated over 120 G20 engagements since December 2024 to spotlight Africa’s priorities—amid a continental debt burden exceeding USD 1 trillion and climate losses projected at 5-15 per cent of GDP by 2050—the exclusion threatens to undermine hard-won gains. Yet it also galvanises the Global South: Brazil and India, successive hosts, have pledged alignment on financial reforms, while the AU’s sherpa role ensures continental cohesion. As Pretoria’s foreign ministry mulls countermeasures, including diversified partnerships with BRICS+ allies, the saga exposes the G20’s fragility in an era of weaponised multilateralism. In a world where consensus eludes even existential threats like pandemics and conflicts, South Africa’s defiance may yet redefine resilience, turning isolation into a clarion for equitable global governance.

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