South Africa will ‘take a commercial break’ from the Group of 20 while President Donald Trump leads the forum, after Washington confirmed the country will not be invited to participate during the United States presidency. The announcement drew a light-hearted response from Pretoria as relations between the two governments continue to cool.
The United States assumed the rotating G20 presidency last week. It did so after boycotting the Johannesburg summit hosted by President Cyril Ramaphosa, marking a sharp escalation in the freeze between Washington and Pretoria. Trump’s administration has repeatedly criticised South Africa’s policies aimed at tackling racial inequality and promoted claims of a supposed ‘white genocide’ in the country, a claim South African officials and analysts have described as false.
Pretoria responds with humour
In a post on social media, Ramaphosa’s spokesperson Vincent Magwenya said South Africa would sit out the Trump-led period and return once leadership changes.
‘About this time next year, the UK will be taking over the G20 presidency. We will be able to engage meaningfully and substantively over what really matters to the rest of the world,’ Magwenya wrote. ‘For now, we will take a commercial break until we resume normal programming.’
Officials in Pretoria said the country would not lobby for inclusion, but noted they had received messages of support from other members of the forum. South Africa has argued that its long-standing role in the G20 reflects both its economic weight on the continent and its place in global economic diplomacy.
Washington confirms exclusion
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio confirmed South Africa would not be invited to participate in any G20 work streams or meetings during the US presidency.
‘President Trump and the United States will not be extending an invitation to the South African government to participate in the G20 during our presidency,’ Rubio said in a statement.
Washington has framed the approach as part of a broader rethink about the purpose of multilateral engagement and what it views as alignment around strategic interests. Analysts say the position could place South Africa outside the US’s preferred set of partners during 2025.
A founding member sidelined
South Africa is a founding member of the G20, which brings together the world’s major economies to discuss growth, debt, climate finance and global stability issues. Its absence removes one of Africa’s major diplomatic voices from the table just months after the African Union secured permanent membership in the forum.
Diplomats in Pretoria privately suggested the move reflects US domestic politics rather than a long-term shift in the G20’s structure. However, they acknowledge the decision highlights deeper mistrust over geopolitical priorities, including South Africa’s position on global governance and its partnerships through BRICS.
Regional implications ahead
Observers say the exclusion could influence regional diplomacy across 2025, with South Africa expected to deepen cooperation with emerging partner blocs and work through the African Union’s new permanent seat to shape debates on debt, trade reform and climate finance. Magwenya’s ‘commercial break’ remark signals a pause rather than a withdrawal, suggesting Pretoria intends to return once the US term ends.







