National Post

Did Trump help swing the British election against the Tories?

- Anne Applebaum The Washington Post

Idon’t want to exaggerate Donald Trump’s importance in last Thursday’s snap election in Britain: this was an election about the British economy and the British national interest. But this was also an election that produced some very close results. Had a few hundred votes gone the other way in a handful of constituen­cies, Theresa May’s Conservati­ves would still have their parliament­ary majority. And so the question has to be asked: on the margins, did President Trump help swing the British election against the Tories? I would argue yes — and in three ways. ❚1 . May’s tr i umphant, lovey- dovey meeting with Trump i n January, a few days after the inaugurati­on, paradoxica­lly made her look weak. Having wrenched Britain away from Europe, she seemed to be running to Washington looking for friends — any friends. Her quick announceme­nt of a forthcomin­g Trump state visit to Britain went down extremely badly: nearly 2 million people signed a petition against it. A film clip of May holding Trump’s hand — apparently he doesn’t like walking down stairs — featured in a pro-Labour music video and numerous cartoons, also reinforced May’s unpleasant “hard- right” image. The Labour leader, Jeremy Corbyn, attacked May as an American puppet: “Waiting to see which way the wind blows in Washington isn’t strong leadership.” ❚ 2. Trump’s vitriolic Twitter attacks on the Labour mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, in the aftermath of the terrorist attack here a week ago made the U. S. president seem even more odious. More to the point, his tweets were denounced ( and Khan was praised) by pretty much everybody speaking in any public forum, from television to social media to the local pub — everybody, that is, except May. She dodged questions about Trump’s tweets before eventually conceding, rather woodenly, that “I think Sadiq Khan is doing a good job and it’s wrong to say anything else.” This didn’t go down at all well, especially in London, where Labour’s numbers were way up. ❚ 3. Trumps’s well- known views on Europe made the Labour Party leader, Jeremy Corbyn, seem more sane and more mainstream than would once have been the case. Corbyn is famously anti- American, anti- NATO and anti- transatlan­tic all i ance, as you would expect given his Marxist past. This should have been a strike against him in Britain, where the alliance with America has historical­ly been popular. But now we have a U. S. president who is also publicly skeptical of NATO, who has little time for the transatlan­tic alliance, and who is in addition considered here to be incompeten­t and irresponsi­ble. To put it differentl­y, it is hard for Conservati­ves to argue “Corbyn is wacky and dangerous” when the U. S. president is seen as even wackier and far more dangerous.

Once again: the influence of the U. S. president is not a major factor. But if European leaders facing electorate­s keep their distance from Trump in the future, don’t be surprised.

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