The Biggest Transatlantic Loser from Trump's Election: Britain's Labour Government
by Tyler Durden
Friday, Nov 08, 2024 - 07:30 PM
Authored by Rupert Darwall via RealClearWorld,
“Congratulations President-elect Donald Trump on your historic election,” British prime minister Sir Keir Starmer posted on X at 3:21am ET on Wednesday. The best that can be said about this tepid concession is that Starmer got his concession in before Kamala Harris. Make no mistake. This is not the result Labour wanted. Starmer’s Labour party was heavily invested in a Harris win and did everything it could to bring it about.
On July 4, Starmer won a landslide majority in the House of Commons with the lowest share of the popular vote (33.7 percent) for a winning party since 1919. Yet within a month, Sofia Patel, the Labour Party’s head of operations, was emailing Labour staffers to “help our friends across the pond elect their first female president”—Patel adding somewhat condescendingly, “Let’s show those Yanks how to win elections.”
More importantly than Labour foot soldiers pointlessly stomping around North Carolina for Harris, Starmer dispatched several of his top aides—including Morgan McSweeney, Labour’s campaign strategist and now Starmer’s chief of staff, and Matthew Doyle, Downing Street director of communications—to brief the Harris team at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago. Little good did it do.
In September, they were followed by Deborah Mattinson, who had run focus groups for Tony Blair and served as Starmer’s director of strategy until Election Day. She would tell the Harris campaign “to put the ‘hope and change stuff’ to one side,” one of her colleagues told Politico. Both Starmer and Harris are former prosecutors. Like Starmer, Harris would be “relentlessly pushing this message that she’s a prosecutor who has put criminals behind bars,” explained Jonathan Ashworth, director of the Labour Together think tank. That didn’t do much good, either.
Labour’s hatred of the new president-elect is personal and visceral. In June 2019, during the Conservative leadership election, Starmer posted: “An endorsement from Donald Trump tells you everything you need to know about what is wrong with Boris Johnson’s politics and why he isn’t fit to be Prime Minister.” In 2017, Wes Streeting, now Starmer’s health secretary, tweeted: “Trump is such an odious, sad, little man. Imagine being proud to have that as your President,” an insult aimed not only at Trump but also at Americans.
The most sustained anti-Trump vitriol came from the Harvard Law School-educated foreign secretary, David Lammy. In 2017, Theresa May, the then prime minister, planned a state visit for President Trump. “Yes, if Trump comes to the UK I will be protesting on the streets,” Lammy tweeted. “He is a racist KKK and Nazi sympathiser.” In an unhinged rant denouncing the visit, Lammy condemned Trump for his “shameful behavior on the international stage. We stand with the American people, but we absolutely say, ‘our democratic values are opposed to the misogyny, opposed to the racism, opposed to Steve Bannon and the horrible white supremacy he seems to stand for.’”
In an August interview with The Spectator (its new editor, Michael Gove, endorsed Harris as “the lesser of two evils”), Woody Johnson, Trump’s ambassador to the Court of St James in his first term, described Lammy’s description of Trump as a “neo-Nazi-sympathizing sociopath” as “not a wise comment,” but then allowed, “those things happen in politics . . . there’s always a way to recover if you want.”
To his credit, Lammy has been doing his best to mend fences. In July, he told the BBC, “Donald Trump has the thickest of skins,” and observed that JD Vance, whom he’d met several times, had used some pretty choice language about Trump in the past. Of the new Vice President-elect, Lammy said they shared similar working-class backgrounds and addiction issues in their families. “We’ve written books on that, we’ve talked about that, and we’re both Christians. So I think I can find common ground with JD Vance.”
Harder to paper over than the history of personal insults is the yawning policy gap between the Labour government and the incoming Trump administration. To Labour, there is no issue more important than climate change. Ed Miliband, Labour’s climate change secretary, whom Charles Moore rightly describes as Labour’s spiritual leader, is a net-zero zealot. On the day Americans were voting for Trump and the return of American energy dominance, Miliband was giving the Cabinet a bleak picture of climate change. “Climate change is a threat to national security and growth, given [it] could force more than 200m people globally to migrate, the global economy could be 19% smaller in 2049 than it would be otherwise & it could put an additional 600,000 people in UK at risk of flooding,” Pippa Crerar, The Guardian’s political editor, reported him saying.
This puts Labour on a collision course with Trump and his pledge to pull out of the Paris climate agreement. With the Senate in Republican hands, Trump might well go a step further than what he did in his first term, and send the agreement—a treaty in all but name—to the Senate for its advice and consent, as required by the Constitution. Doing so would make it impossible for a future president to rejoin. It would lead to howls of outrage from the climate industrial complex and render their unachievable and unaffordable net zero programs pointless.
And it’s not only climate change. A week before the election, Labour unveiled a massive tax, spend, and borrow budget. In its first budget in 14 years, Labour raised taxes by £40bn ($51.6bn), borrowing by £28bn ($36.1bn), and public spending by £70bn ($90.3bn). The budget constitutes a doomed-to-fail bet that transferring around 2.5 percent of GDP from the wealth-generating private sector to the zero-productivity-growth public sector will, by some undefined form of alchemy, improve Britain’s poor economic performance.
It is here that President Trump’s second term could well have the biggest positive impact on Britain—by holding up Labour’s disastrous economic policies for comparison with Trump’s supply-side economics.
Rupert Darwall is a senior fellow of the RealClearFoundation and author of The Folly of Climate Leadership: Net Zero and Britain’s Disastrous Energy Policies.
As all US Presidents in the last 100 years have discovered , Britain is an essential US ally, which the Americans often have to lean on, regardless whether they like the occupant of No. 10 Downing Street.
ReplyDeleteDonald Trump will be no different.
WW.1, WW 2, Korean War, Gulf War 1, Gulf War 2, Afghanistan,
Britain refused to back the Yanks during the Vietnam War, which was sorely missed.
https://t.me/disclosetv/14751
ReplyDeleteNOW - Robert Habeck, Green party member and Vice Chancellor of Germany's collapsed government coalition: "The regulation of algorithms, of X or TikTok, through the application of European legal norms is a central task. We cannot place ‘democratic discourse’ in the hands of Elon Musk and Chinese software."
@disclosetv
As I was saying about the part of destroying the D party and reconstituting it back with sanity within its ranksand files...
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https://t.me/dotconnectinganons/153282
President Trump: I am very surprised that the Democrats, who fought a hard and valiant fight in the 2020 Presidential Election, raising a record amount of money, didn’t have lots of $’s left over. Now they are being squeezed by vendors and others. Whatever we can do to help them during this difficult period, I would strongly recommend we, as a Party and for the sake of desperately needed UNITY, do. We have a lot of money left over in that our biggest asset in the campaign was “Earned Media,” and that doesn’t cost very much. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!
Share on 𝕏
Used to come across a story by an Argentinian writer, the Aleph, and Gabriel Marquez's One Hundred Years of Solitude...it was, what was that all about kind of feeling coming out of it.
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https://t.me/dotconnectinganons/153283
🤖Donald Trump has beefed up his security detail at Mar-a-Lago with a Secret Service robot dog — with photos showing the four-legged sentry patrolling the sprawling Florida property.
The robotic hound was seen mechanically strolling on the grass among the palm trees outside the Palm Beach estate Friday morning, video shows.
“DO NOT PET” reads a large warning on its side.
The remote-controlled robot dog, made by Boston Dynamics, is with the United States Secret Service, the agency confirmed.
“Safeguarding the President-elect is a top priority,” an agency spokesperson told The Post.
READ | XPOST
Coincidence?
ReplyDeleteControl...
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https://t.me/WeTheMedia/111989
Damn, that pesky Q and all these “coincidences” ….
XPOST
I believe the point made has merit...
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https://t.me/WeTheMedia/111991?single
The good guys would not have been able to pull all of this off without deeply embedding themselves into enemy territory, and even, at times, appearing like the enemy themselves. EXACTLY like an undercover agent.
Think Donnie Brasco, for example. That movie, of course, is based on a very true story.
I also *highly recommend* everyone watch Turn: Washington’s Spies which is based on The Culper Ring.
(The Culper Ring were invaluable in changing the tide of the Revolutionary War and our eventual victory.)
The show is a pretty accurate portrayal of the methods utilized in activating spies and double agents to topple enemy institutions from the inside out.
Watch the aforementioned, and read 5GW - You will gain a far better view of the lengths sometimes required to stifle the enemy - I guarantee it.
Remember: Infiltration goes both ways, and working in the dark to serve the light is a thing.
XPOST
That made 3 not returning, Pence, Pompeo, Halley...
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https://t.me/WeTheMedia/111988
Trump tells Nikki Haley and Mike Pompeo “you’re fired!” Thank God. This was a good choice.
Nikki Haley - Trump can't stand an Indian Auntie after meeting Kamala, wakakaka
DeleteFor info...doesn't matter whether it is true or otherwise... something to observe
DeleteI'm comfortable with the video of MP made about there being "a smooth transition to a second Trump Administration" just before exiting Washington back in Jan 2021. The mil op is still in operation but now with DJT in the driving seat...probably this time is the justice phase...
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https://t.me/dotconnectinganons/153329?single
What's interesting about this is that after the election, Mike Pompeo posted "As I was saying" - with this classic video.
I remember this so clearly. Y'all might think I'm crazy, but... I believe some strategic narratives are being put out there. I mean, why would Trump have to "announce" he is not bringing in Nikki Haley or Mike Pompeo? Why didn't he mention the dozens of other folks who worked for him in the past? This is intriguing.
Trust Kansas?
https://twitter.com/mikepompeo/status/1854241775868580296
If true, this is very the pertinent...fyi
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Ezra Cohen RT: Former CIA Director Leon Panetta: "With regards to the Middle East, I think he’s [Trump] basically going to give Netanyahu a blank check - Whatever you do, whatever you want to do, whoever you want to go after, you have my blessing."
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Panetta signed the 51 Spies letter — Trump's opponents are not going away or even staying quiet. They are going to be even more determined this time because they have to be.
🔗
The irrepressible Katie Hopkins...
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https://t.me/KatieHopkins_1/1243