The former UK ambassador to the US believes there’s a prospect Trump will return, even though he’ll be “78 by that stage”.
No self-respecting democracy could accept the sort of concessions demanded by the victor after a war had been won.
The White House attack on “the squad” risks turning out Democratic voters as a natural by-product of seeking to turn out Republicans.
The UK – US relationship will roll on, despite his insults to our Ambassdor. To suggest otherwise is leadership election positioning, not real politics.
Jeremy Corbyn echoed the Prime Minister’s message of regret.
The Foreign Secretary adds that “standing up for Britain means standing up for the finest diplomats in the world”.
He says that he believes that whoever leaked the former Ambassador’s memos should be “eviscerated”.
The Speaker must rein in self-indulgent MPs who no longer try to express themselves with the greatest possible concision and force.
It must necessarily have a worldview. The question is whether or not this has caught up with the Brexit vote.
“I had one of your guys in here the other day. Amazing guy. Brilliant guy. Gove. Gorgeous Gove. Wrote a tremendous article – a stupendous article – about me.”
I’m glad to see we’ve now had the guts to stop a tanker we believe is smuggling Iranian oil in defiance of sanctions on Syria.