The election of Donald Trump as US president is objectively a disaster, for the United States and for the world. So why is the UK government and media pretending it’s not? And why do Conservatives look so happy?
As the UK awoke to the results on Wednesday, Kemi Badenoch planted her flag. In her first Prime Minister’s Questions as Tory leader, Badenoch tried to embarrass the government by asking whether foreign secretary David Lammy had apologised to Trump for saying in 2018: “Trump is not only a woman-hating neo-Nazi sympathizing sociopath, he is also a profound threat to the international order.”
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That this statement is factually correct is not changed by Trump’s political fortunes. And one hasn’t noticed Badenoch call for Trump to apologise for having said far worse about the UK. But Lammy looked suitably uncomfortable, and Keir Starmer (who gave Trump his “hearty congratulations” upon winning) said they recently had dinner with the man of the hour.
Badenoch then accused Keir Starmer of having “no plans whatsoever for building on the special relationship” by signing a free trade deal, adding: “He needs to realize that we in this country rely on our single biggest trade partner.”
Badenoch went on to endorse a key plank of Trump’s foreign policy: “President Trump is also right to argue that Europe needs to increase its defense spending.” Was he also right to argue that Russia could invade NATO members if they don’t cough up more money, as he did in February?
The Labour government at least has the excuse of diplomacy. Even president Zelenskyy is having to make nice with Trump, a man who wants to hand Ukraine on a plate to Vladimir Putin. But is this the sort of relationship countries want with the United States – having to bow and scrape to a coiffured gargoyle like some imperial satellite?