While working on its Brexit deal, it is simultaneously cultivating trade relationships with Japan, the US, Australia and New Zealand.
Political commentators have flocked to describe the President’s ‘new tone’. But can it last?
Or will Britain trade in its global reputation for lawfulness in exchange for keeping Trump sweet for trade?
Trump has shown a rare flash of flexibility in signing a police reform executive order, breaking a hitherto narrow commitment to law enforcement.
The ongoing question of race in America poses an existential threat to the very principle of American exceptionalism on which the country was built.
We need the broad range of powers the US adopted after the death of the Russian tax lawyer Sergei Magnitsky.
In political terms, there is still time for the Coronavirus crisis to turn the tables on the President. But it hasn’t yet.
Ed West describes in his new book how the Left has established “a moral monopoly”. It describes the mentality of a Tory who will not be imprisoned in a system.
The authors of a new book trace the enduring influence of American Puritanism, and explain how the President appeals to it.
The only real hope that exists for lasting peace is to strengthen the Afghan government and its institutions, not undermine them.
His message, that the Conservatives will win if the electoral battle is on identity politics and culture wars, is correct.
Johnson, Macron and Merkel don’t agree on everything, but they share a common concern about ISIS now being allowed the space to revive.
It isn’t obvious that his foreign policy has been less effective than George W.Bush’s activism or Obama’s passivity. But what’s his aim here?
And how we reached what seems like an unusually grim and shambolic time in national life.
Labour is banking on our innumeracy. I don’t say that they are taking us for fools. Plenty of clever and educated people can’t process numbers on that scale.
Or will Britain trade in its global reputation for lawfulness in exchange for keeping Trump sweet for trade?