“I would anticipate for all of you that it will be a couple of months before the president has an in-person or invites a foreign leader to meet in person here at the White House,” Psaki told reporters during a press briefing.
Trudeau’s office said in a readout of their Jan. 22 call that the pair had agreed “to meet next month.”
“You can meet over video, as we all know. I don’t have any timeline of a meeting to convey or to confirm for you,” Psaki responded.
The president has yet to travel abroad, and the White House hasn’t indicated when he might do so.
Among others, Biden has also spoken over the phone with British Prime Minister Boris Johnson to discuss potentially forging a new U.S.-Britain trade deal, and Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador on immigration issues.
Biden has also telephoned the leaders of Australia, China, Germany, India, Japan, Russia, and South Korea.
Vice President Kamala Harris on Monday spoke with French President Emmanuel Macron—her second call with a foreign leader. Biden and Macron spoke on Jan. 24.
According to a readout of the call from her office, she expressed to Macron “her commitment to strengthening bilateral ties between the United States and France and to revitalizing the transatlantic alliance.”
The pair “agreed on the need for close bilateral and multilateral cooperation to address COVID-19, climate change, and support democracy at home and around the world.”
Psaki has also said talks are underway on holding the presidential State of the Union address to a packed joint session of Congress. “Obviously it will look different” due to COVID-19 restrictions, she said.