Otago Daily Times

World’s leaders send their messages, loud and clear

What a fine week for political bromance and readers of power body language, Barbara Ellen writes.

- A Barbara Ellen is an Observer columnist.

HOW adorable to see all the mancuddles between world leaders. There were presidents Trump and Macron, the former brushing imaginary dandruff off the latter’s shoulder, in such a painfully desperate attempt to appear dominant that one can only imagine that Stormy Daniels felt horribly triggered.

Elsewhere, North Korea’s Kim Jongun and South Korea’s Moon Jaein decided to ditch all the nuclear unpleasant­ness for the Korean answer to male bonding, which presumably ended with a night in, with just Netflix, popcorn, 750 bodyguards and, in Moon’s case, a cyanide pellet in a back molar to crunch down on, should there be a disagreeme­nt over which Will Ferrell film was funniest.

Some people might view such macho bonding displays as body language Armageddon, but phooey to such cynicism. Arguably, somewhere within all those waiststrok­ing, earnuzzlin­g moments, world peace was definitely achieved?* (*maybe). So what if Trump’s handshakes were so furiously hardyankin­g that Macron could have been forgiven for keeping a chiropract­or on speeddial. Likewise, does it matter if Kim and Moon strolling hand in hand made it seem as though the world’s nuclear fate rested on North Korea’s Tweedledum remaining pals with South Korea’s Tweedledee? Or that, like me, some people’s immediate thought was: ‘‘The Teletubbie­s look even weirder with their costumes off.’’

One message from this politicall­y ‘‘handsy’’ week came through loud and clear — when male politician­s bond, as when Tony Blair sported his jeans during his own unforgetta­ble 2001 bigboy sleepover with George W. Bush at Camp David, subtlety is never the goal.

Comparison­s could be drawn with the Scottish Conservati­ve leader, Ruth Davidson, who somehow announced her pregnancy without once lewdly grabbing her crotch or even that of her partner, Jen Wilson — both women exhibiting nothing but natural, easy happiness. Perhaps when everything that’s happening is real, there’s no need for hyperbolic alphagestu­ring?

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? French President Emmanuel Macron pats US President Donald Trump on the shoulder at a news conference at the White House in Washington last week.
PHOTO: REUTERS French President Emmanuel Macron pats US President Donald Trump on the shoulder at a news conference at the White House in Washington last week.

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