From the streets of London
Protests greeted US President Donald Trump during his first official visit to the United Kingdom. Last Friday, hundreds of thousands of people in the UK marched on the streets to make their disapproval of a wide range of Trump policies known. London alone saw a crowd that the organiser joked was ‘larger than Trump’s inauguration.’ The protesters, which included Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, criticised Trump over his policies on Palestine, climate change, refugees, migrants, Muslims and his well-known misogyny. This is the kind of unity that has rarely been seen against imperialist policies since the protests against the Iraq war in 2003. However, Trump’s arrival also emboldened the Far Right in UK, which took out pro-Trump and pro-white supremacist protests. This was another confirmation of Trump’s real audience – and how divided the world his policies would create will be. Politicians who cosy up to Trump must know that his presence provides a real risk at home of giving power to fascists.
The visit itself has been a diplomatic disaster with Trump criticising British Prime Minister Theresa May for continuing to seek a relationship with the European Union after Brexit – alienating both the British PM and European allies. Later, true to form, Trump claimed that the interview by a British tabloid was ‘fake news.’ The Trump visit seems to have affected May’s already shaky government. Trump’s presence compromises stability in the UK and Europe. No one could claim that May had not been warned. Massive protests had been promised when May extended an invitation in January 2017. This was a visit that confirmed that the US cannot be held as a reliable European ally anymore – and, for the rest of the world, this is a good thing. Europe freed from the shackles of US influence could offer much more to global policymaking. It has kept the deal with Iran and has been traditionally been more critical of Israel. The trouble is that the temptation to cosy up to the US is something European politicians find hard to ignore – whether out of habit or their interlinked material interests. In the UK, British PM Theresa May rolled out the red carpet for Trump, despite Trump doing everything possible to undermine her and her government. Political leaders will continue to cosy up to Trump, unless the protests seen on the streets in the UK follow Trump around the world. It is the streets of the United Kingdom that offered hope as Trump toured its royal castles and military academies.
-
Sarah Ferguson Has ‘no Remorse’ Over Jeffrey Epstein Friendship -
A$AP Rocky Throws Rihanna Surprise Birthday Dinner On Turning 38 -
Andrew Jokes In Hold As BAFTA Welcomes Prince William -
Sam Levinson Donates $27K To Eric Dane Family Fund After Actor’s Death -
Savannah Guthrie Mother Case: Police Block Activist Mom Group Efforts To Search For Missing Nancy Over Permission Row -
Dove Cameron Calls '56 Days' Casting 'Hollywood Fever Dream' -
Prince William, Kate Middleton ‘carrying Weight’ Of Reputation In Epstein Scandal -
Timothée Chalamet Compares 'Dune: Part Three' With Iconic Films 'Interstellar', 'The Dark Knight' & 'Apocalypse Now' -
Little Mix Star Leigh-Anne Pinnock Talks About Protecting Her Children From Social Media -
Ghislaine Maxwell Is ‘fall Guy’ For Jeffrey Epstein, Claims Brother -
Timothee Chalamet Rejects Fame Linked To Kardashian Reality TV World While Dating Kylie Jenner -
Sarah Chalke Recalls Backlash To 'Roseanne' Casting -
Pamela Anderson, David Hasselhoff's Return To Reimagined Version Of 'Baywatch' Confirmed By Star -
Willie Colón, Salsa Legend, Dies At 75 -
Prince Edward Praised After Andrew's Arrest: 'Scandal-free Brother' -
Shawn Levy Recalls Learning Key Comedy Tactic In 'The Pink Panther'