Irish Independent

Real winner from president’s disastrous visit to Britain could be Corbyn

- Anne Applebaum

PRESIDENT Donald Trump’s catastroph­ic visit to Britain began with a political scandal of his own creation. In an interview with ‘The Sun’, the US president slammed the prime minister, Theresa May, and supported her rival.

He criticised her conduct of Brexit, the most contentiou­s issue in British politics, and used inflammato­ry language about immigratio­n, the second most contentiou­s issue in British politics.

The story appeared just as Mrs May was hosting a black-tie dinner for him at Blenheim Palace.

Mr Trump then took it all back, dismissing the journalist­s who had accurately reported his words as “fake news” and offering some flabby support for Mrs May.

In response, ‘The Sun’ published the full audio recording of the interview online – and loudly supported its original story with the front-page headline “FAKE SCHMOOZE.”

The interview seemed like a diplomatic fumble. But it was not. All of the views Mr Trump expressed were in fact consistent with the previous actions of his administra­tion.

John Bolton, Mr Trump’s national security adviser, has recently met with pro-Brexit members of parliament – in effect, a party within the Conservati­ve Party – to ask how he could help their cause.

Behind the scenes, Trump’s team has lobbied Britain on behalf of Tommy Robinson, a violent white nationalis­t and co-founder of the fringe English Defence League, who is now in prison.

This open, partisan, US interventi­on in British politics is unpreceden­ted, going well beyond president Ronald Reagan’s political flirtation with Margaret Thatcher or president Bill Clinton’s friendship with Tony Blair.

Mr Trump is supporting not the elected British leader but rather her internal party rivals as well as an extraparli­amentary racist fringe that has very little support in Britain but that matters to US alt-right activists, the core of Mr Trump’s base.

The result: tens of thousands protested. A vast balloon, caricaturi­ng Trump as a giant orange baby in a nappy, flew over London on Friday and Edinburgh on Saturday.

Smaller anti-Trump gatherings took place in Glasgow, Belfast, Birmingham and elsewhere. A paraglider sailed over his Scottish golf course, flying a banner that described him as “below par”.

The aftermath may well be even more important. According to polls taken before this visit, 77pc of Britons have an unfavourab­le view of the American president, a figure very close to the disapprova­l numbers for Vladimir Putin, whose thugs allegedly poisoned British citizens.

Seventy-four percent of Britons described the US president as “sexist”; only 16pc described him as “honest”. Since then, millions watched as Queen Elizabeth stood waiting for him, looking at her watch; they then saw him rudely walk in front of her.

In the wake of these and

other embarrassm­ents, it’s perfectly possible that antiTrump sentiments will grow.

Along with national regret for the English team’s World Cup defeat, dislike of him seems to unify Britain more than anything else. And this dislike may coalesce into a more generalise­d antiAmeric­anism.

If so, Mr Trump’s team will not only compromise the hard-line Brexiteers whom they back, it will also compromise Mrs May, who went out of her way to welcome the president.

Photograph­s of her holding Mr Trump’s hand, first at the White House and now at Chequers, the prime ministeria­l residence, have been widely mocked.

The real beneficiar­y of the White House’s British meddling could prove to be someone else altogether.

Jeremy Corbyn, the farthest-left Labour Party leader in recent memory, has been consistent­ly anti-American, indeed anti-Western, for more than three decades. This is a man who described the killing of Osama bin Laden as a “tragedy,” and who has blamed Nato for the Russian annexation of Crimea.

At least until now, these views have been important marks against him. But in an anti-Trump, anti-American Britain, maybe now they won’t be.

Actions create reactions. Angry language creates an angry response.

And already, there’s a precedent: the president’s racist rhetoric has already helped elect a left-wing, antiTrump leader of Mexico.

Could Mr Trump achieve the same in Britain? (© Washington Post)

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