News

Many people on the Right in Britain are delighted by Donald Trump’s victory. He has seen off Kamala Harris, a patently mediocre woman of the soft Left who champions woke causes. I am very far from delighted. In fact, I’m profoundly depressed.

Many people on the Right in Britain are delighted by Donald Trump’s victory. He has seen off Kamala Harris, a patently mediocre woman of the soft Left who champions woke causes. I am very far from delighted. In fact, I’m profoundly depressed.

There is good reason to believe that Trump will be bad for America, the world and Britain.

Of course, we don’t have very much idea what he will do since such policies as he unveiled during the presidential campaign were pretty vague, and may never see the light of day.

Nevertheless, we know he is a convicted felon who incited an insurrection in Washington in January 2021. We know he’s a liar and cheat who claimed without supplying any evidence that the November 2020 election was stolen from him.

We also know that last year a civil court delivered a judgment that Trump sexually abused a woman in the mid-1990s, and was liable for battery, as well as for defaming her.

These are not mere character flaws or blemishes. They collectively amount to the most damning moral indictment of any leader elected in a modern democracy. Not for nothing was he recently described by his longest-serving former chief of staff as a ‘fascist’.

I am amazed that some of my Tory friends, not to mention millions of American voters, are prepared to overlook the sins of this foul-mouthed braggart.

Let me say, in a spirit of fairness, that Trump has one quality – an ability to persevere despite being hauled from one court to another and being chastised by the mainstream media. No one should gainsay the extent of his achievement in being only the second man in American history to return to the White House after being out of office.

We saw Trump’s inner strength in the moments after he was wounded in an assassination attempt in July, mouthing the words ‘Fight, fight, fight’ having been raised to his feet.

Remarkable, yes, but this resilience doesn’t wipe out the lies or the name-calling or the whipping up of a violent mob. It is proof of an unquenchable ego, and possibly of a narcissistic personality.

What does Trump’s triumph tell the young people of the United States and the world? That brazen lying can be rewarded with the highest prizes. That cheats prosper. What a dismal example, and how far from America’s idea of itself as a shining city on a hill.

It gets worse. Looking at Trump – his rambling and incoherent speeches, often delivered in babyish English – who can say with any confidence that this capricious, unpredictable 78-year-old will be a stable and reliable leader of the Free World?

Kamala Harris is pedestrian, and misguided in her economic prescriptions for America. Her dullness, though, would have guaranteed security. She wouldn’t have done anything mad. We can’t say the same about Donald Trump.

Consider his ideas. He has vowed to impose a 10 per cent tariff on imports from all countries except China, which is threatened with 60 per cent duties. Oh, and Mexico faces 100 per cent tariffs unless it stops illegal immigrants from crossing the border with the US. The effect of such measures would be to increase prices in America, and probably lead to a global trade war.

The United States is Britain’s largest single trade partner. We enjoy a surplus. Don’t imagine that, just because Trump is half-British and supposedly likes this country, he will exempt us.

Maybe he’ll change his mind about tariffs. But it’s certainly possible that he will go ahead with the scheme to our detriment. The other day – this is a measure of the man’s wildness – he suggested he would like to scrap federal income tax and replace the revenue with money generated from tariffs.

Trump is an isolationist as well as a protectionist. My colleague Boris Johnson – who as Prime Minister was the Western leader who first rallied to President Volodymyr Zelensky’s side after Russia’s invasion – has suggested that Trump ‘will be strong and decisive’ in his support of Ukraine and in ‘defending democracy’.

There’s very little evidence to support this view. Trump has spoken about Ukraine in negative terms, describing it as ‘demolished’ in September, and its people as ‘dead’. The US has hitherto provided far more military aid to the beleaguered country than any other government. Only optimistic souls believe this will continue under Trump.

Indeed, the happiest man in the world apart from Donald Trump is probably Vladimir Putin. He knows that prospective Vice-President JD Vance has said Ukraine should cede land to end the war. If such a capitulation is forced on Zelensky by Trump, it will embolden Putin in further adventures.

Then there is Nato, of which Trump has been a relentless critic. Earlier this year, he said during a campaign rally that he would ‘encourage’ Russia ‘to do whatever the hell they want’ to Nato allies that don’t spend enough on defence.

During his first presidency Trump rightly rebuked European countries for taking a free ride on American taxpayers, and devoting insufficient resources to defence. France, Germany, Spain and Italy must dig much deeper into their pockets. So should Britain, which spends only slightly more.

But it’s bound to take time for European countries to build up their capabilities. The danger is that they will face a resurgent Russia – which may be handed victory in Ukraine by the mercurial Trump – before they are able to defend themselves without Uncle Sam’s protection.

Those on the Right who deprecate Kamala Harris should accept that, for all her shortcomings, she wouldn’t have left Nato allies in such a predicament. That is what I mean when I say that she offered far greater security.

Not all of Trump’s policies are dangerous, of course. His tough line on illegal immigration, which has run out of control during the Biden years, evidently won him support including, interestingly, from Latinos. (Keir Starmer, take note.) That said, Trump’s threatened deportation of ‘maybe 20 million’ undocumented migrants sounds draconian.

Remember he will have a Republican Senate and, very possibly when the results have come in, a Republican House of Representatives. Republican appointees also control the Supreme Court. He will have almost untrammelled freedom to do whatever he wants.

We are heading for turbulent times. And I don’t expect that the bellicose Trump will be drawn to our own dear Government.

A man more different from our PM could scarcely be imagined; Starmer idiotically boasted of his recent dinner with Trump yesterday, as though it was proof of a deep friendship. I’m sure the volatile President-elect won’t forget insults recklessly churned out by Foreign Secretary David Lammy while in opposition, such as calling him a ‘neo-Nazi sympathising sociopath’ and ‘a tyrant in a toupee’.

We’ll have to try to get on with him, of course. Let’s pray that his often insane bark turns out to be worse than his bite.

Donald Trump is, or will be once installed in the White House in January, the most powerful man on earth. It is the prospect of this vast power being misused and abused that truly terrifies me.

Related Posts

Sitting in A&E aged just 19 and in her second year of university with agonising, swollen ankles – the latest in a long line of unexplained health complaints – it dawned on Rachel Hall how unwell she was.

Sitting in A&E aged just 19 and in her second year of university with agonising, swollen ankles – the latest in a long line of unexplained health complaints – it dawned on Rachel Hall how unwell she was. The doctor was saying her latest problem was nothing serious, as her partner, now husband, Leon, reeled off the long list of symptoms she had been struggling with for months. ‘Leon described how I had lost weight and my hair was falling out,’ says Rachel, from Lewisham, south-east London.

Singham Again – Promo Trailer | Welcome ChulBul Pandey To Cop Universe | Salman Khan | 1st November

Inspector ChulBul Pandey is celebrated for his unique capabilities that surpass typical police work. The call for ChulBul Pandey arises as the need for a formidable inspector becomes…

From people who see heaven after being declared clinically dead, to those who believe they’ve been reincarnated, there are plenty who are certain that life goes on after death.

From people who see heaven after being declared clinically dead, to those who believe they’ve been reincarnated, there are plenty who are certain that life goes on after death. Now, others are claiming to have had ‘pre-birth experiences’ – and insist they experienced consciousness before they were even born while their soul was already alive and getting ready to enter a human body. Also known as a ‘pre-mortal’ or ‘near-birth’ experiences, self-proclaimed ‘psychics’ on social media claim they remember their soul travelling down a ‘pre-birth tunnel’ and into their human bodies.

Tragic Liam Payne will be flown back to the UK today as the One Direction star’s body has finally been released to his family.

Tragic Liam Payne will be flown back to the UK today as the One Direction star’s body has finally been released to his family. The news comes three weeks after Liam died at the age of 31 on October 16 when he fell from a hotel balcony in Buenos Aires, Argentina. An autopsy previously confirmed Liam had suffered internal and external bleeding and multiple traumatic injuries sustained as a result of the fall.

As Democrats all over the world weep into their kombucha, I’m afraid I have only one thing to say: you brought this on yourselves. I’m sure Kamala Harris is a perfectly nice woman but at no point during this campaign did she demonstrate the strength of character, vision and sheer star power required to win the White House.

As Democrats all over the world weep into their kombucha, I’m afraid I have only one thing to say: you brought this on yourselves. I’m sure Kamala Harris is a perfectly nice woman but at no point during this campaign did she demonstrate the strength of character, vision and sheer star power required to win the White House. Many Americans – certainly most Americans I know – have deep reservations about Donald Trump. They find him distasteful, divisive, deeply dodgy. And indeed, he can be all of those things. But even the staunchest of liberals felt deeply disappointed and let down by this Biden administration and, in particular, its stubborn refusal to acknowledge the current President’s evident shortcomings. Harris was a poor choice of candidate – but perhaps more significantly she was also an establishment choice on the part of an elite desperate to stay in power, a human box-ticking exercise who, whatever her own personal merits, was always going to stick in the craw of the ordinary American.

BRAHMĀSTRA PART 2: DEV – Trailer | Hindi | Ranbir Kapoor | Hrithik Roshan | Alia Bhatt,Deepika P. P3

Brahmāstra’s Power Unleashed: The character Dev has been freed through the power of Brahmāstra, indicating a significant shift in the narrative. Water Weapon’s Role: The water weapon, previously…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *