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“We are focused on everything we accomplished here at the G7 summit. The Prime Minister said nothing he hasn’t said before — both in public, and in private conversations with the President,” said a statement from the prime minister’s office Saturday night. Trudeau’s spokeswoman said she believed the communique was still in effect.

On Sunday morning, France reacted. A statement from the office of President Emmanuel Macron said France and Europe stand by the communique. Anyone who turns their back on it is showing “incoherence and inconsistency,” it said, and international co-operation cannot depend on tempers and comments. “Let us be serious and worthy of our people.”

All weekend, Trump clashed with the six others on major issues, including U.S.-imposed steel and aluminum tariffs and the participation of Russia in the G7 — a last-minute suggestion Friday morning that sent officials from multiple countries into a tizzy right before the summit began. Russia was expelled in 2014 after it took over the territory of Crimea from Ukraine and its reinstatement is a non-starter with other leaders.

The disagreements are so deep that before talks began, Donald Tusk, the President of the European Council, openly shared concerns about how Trump was threatening the norm. “What worries me most however is the fact that the rules-based international order is being challenged, quite surprisingly not by the usual suspects but by its main architect and guarantor, the U.S.,” he said.