Thousands of Scots protest while Donald Trump plays golf



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London. FOCUS News Agency publishes the opinion of conservative Matthew Paris without editorial intervention on the pages of the British daily The Times

Kissing Theresa May, after having strongly expressed against her, n & ## It was not remorse or revision of position. Donald Trump plays a good cop of his own cop. The first shot was indicative. The president was right the first time for the trade agreement between the United States and the United Kingdom and he knows it. Sun's title was exactly what he expected, and the next "there … there … did not say" should be understood as a kind of exquisite torture when a cat plays with a mouse. Donald Trump does it because he can.
This visit of the 45th President of the United States will be seen as a turning point in British and European policies of the twenty-first century. As we do so, we will see that it is more important than any baby balloon, the Trump attack against our unfortunate prime minister, or the intimidation exchange. No future president will dare to say what he has said about NATO, the special trade agreement with the United Kingdom or the choice we face
Because it's not really Donald Trump. These are great powers in history. It's America: America, for which Trump can offend us as a nasty cartoon, but it's sort of his product.
It's about how nations with almost unlimited power use it, they always use it, and they will always do it. The power does not have to be refined. The way Trump adjusts his hair, wipes his nose, ties his tie or treats his guests does not matter. He can face his hair, his nose, his tie and his guests all he wants. He is the president of the United States of America, the American president has the power to take a different approach and we can turn our little British fists into rage and horror, but we must finally face it. The scourge of my fellow British liberals begins to collapse on sawdust.
The greatest journalist of all time, Henry Lewis Mencken, says it correctly in many ways, one way or the other. On July 26, 1920, he wrote this in The Baltimore Sun: "Since democracy is perfect, the office of the president is more and more the inner soul of the people." In a glorious and grandiose day, ordinary people will end up that they desire and the White House will be decorated by a real simple. "
It would be tempting to say that 98 years later, Mencken's prophecy was fulfilled; but it would not be correct. This chair is certainly not simple – it's a lot more complicated.
Life is too short to deconstruct Donald Trump's mental processes, so let me quote my former colleague from the Times Michael Gow. After interviewing the president in January 2017 for this newspaper, the current environment minister noted: "Integrity comes in many forms." Properly understood, the remark was not sarcastic, but rather confusing
In the last century, Margaret Thatcher's colleague, Norman St John-Stewas, was particularly critical and completely left-handed, she noted that "what is unpleasant about Margaret, is that when she speaks without thinking, she says what what she thinks. "
The two men described the same phenomenon: the crude honesty that can come with brute force.
Donald Trump does not want to think too much before speaking, and he usually says what he thinks. And the problem with us rather than with him is that what he thinks is what many people think, but do not want to say.
Is not it just an badet to the European side of NATO that does not take its share of defense spending? His criticism of Germany for doing what he wants is heard in European corridors of power for decades, but calmer
Is he right about the dangers of European dependence on Russian gas? It's a good thing to complain that if Germany buys, and that Russia is selling well, but look how Western dependence on Middle East oil has corrupted world politics for half a century .
He is right in saying that China does not offer the world a level playing field. Maybe there is a need for a risky game here. It should not be misleading on America's trade terms with the EU. This is not practical for supporters of Breccitus, but it is true that the EU conducts its trade negotiations with "third parties" on the principle of power. We must therefore listen less to European cries about US threats to increase tariffs while Europe imposes rights a long time ago. It is necessary that both parties remove the homework.
Is he right to say that British policy is in turmoil? And he is right in saying that Thérèse May's Brecketes proposals will make the United Kingdom an economic satellite of the European Union
As a member of the Conservative Party, I received an email from Theresa May (Matthew – Take Control), which is more damning than anything that Donald Trump says, and it's far from being honest. Bratzit, when the Prime Minister knows that it is a plan for a "sweet" Breckit, Trump is right: The government's White Paper has ended the idea of ​​supporters of the "hard" Breckit for the Great Britain which freely trades with the world.
The photos of this presidential visit complete a photograph defining the era of two countries, each doing what it does best. Great Britain: pomposity and protocol; smooth words and red carpets; palaces, banquets, royalties, silverware, gold plates and fine porcelain; humble communiques and delicate euphemisms. America: brute force and columns of cars; queue of guards, counselors and badistants, speakers and ghosts; military helicopters, armored limousines and armored glbad. Every emperor of world power in every age seems like this. Trump's predecessors were just more polite
How do you think Britain in the 19th century would have looked like if you were Siam or Burma, or China, or settlers in South Africa, or even (in the previous century) North American colonies? Brutish, brutal, perfect and insensitive to culture: big greedy imbeciles. Now the views are reversed. And we do not like it, is not it?
The Trump interview in the Sun newspaper asks a question to Breckit's supporters and opponents. Satellite for the United States? Satellite in the European Union? Or a part of the European Union? Decision time is approaching.
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London. Donald Trump left London from Stensteed Airport to the luxury resort of Scotland leaving diplomatic chaos behind him, writes the British Guard The Guardian .
The presidential hurricane, which swept the southern part of England, broke the protocols, undermined the institutions and left the politicians at one stroke. When the MV-22 Osprey helicopter helicopters withdrew, Theresa May could be forgiven for relaxing with familiar relief to every host terribly hijacked.
This visit was far from the visits of the previous US presidents. They visited Buckingham Palace and the Premier House. It was not the state visit that May promised during his visit to Washington shortly after the inauguration of Donald Trump. The tens of thousands of people who protest in the streets of London probably have something to do with it
Asked for the interview of the British Sun newspaper, criticizing Prime Minister Teresa May, he said the interview was good, but the newspaper missed the good things he said about May. .
Britain may have to humbly accept that for Trump it was just a stop between German Chancellor Angela Merkel's attack on the NATO summit in Brussels and the resumption of warm relations with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Helsinki
The organizers managed to protect Trump from the public. The huge baby bubble Trump, holding a mobile phone and dressed in a giant diaper, flew over the parliament buildings. Tens of thousands of people took to the streets of London and staged a colorful and noisy demonstration with many posters, some of which had offensive content because of the US president
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London. Donald Trump is eager to repair his relations with the British Prime Minister at an extraordinary press conference during which he accused the British media of "false news" and called the US-US relations British "high level". ] The Independent
The President attempted to repair the damage caused by an interview in which he questioned Theresa May's plans for Breckit, stating that they could fail the future US trade agreement after leaving the EU and hailed the political rival of Prime Minister Boris Johnson.
But when he stood next to the Prime Minister during the awkward event, he praised her for being "smart," "decisive," "capable," and "unbelievable," and finally added, "J & rsquo; Would have preferred to have it as a friend, enemy, that I can say.
After walking, she was asked to comment on her words in an interview with the English tabloid Sun, "that Thérèse May's plans for Breckith are not what people have voted, and that he told her to from the EU in a different way
In response, he said: "I have not criticized the Prime Minister, I have a lot of respect for the Prime Minister and unfortunately a story has been presented, which was generally good, but I do not have a problem with it. I did not include what I said about the Prime Minister.
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London. Donald Trump is impressed by the English Queen, writes the British Conservative Journal Daily Express .
The Queen met Donald Trump in Windsor Castle. Before the visit, the US president seemed impressed to meet the world's oldest monarch, whom he described as "unbelievable".
Donald Trump and the first lady spent a total of 57 minutes with the queen in the castle, and 47 of those minutes were inside the beloved residence of the British monarch
The presidential couple stayed 17 minutes longer than expected, indicating that the public went very well
Before the meeting between the state leaders, Trump spoke of his admiration on the part of the queen in his interview to the Sun newspaper, which he called "tall woman".
He told the newspaper: "Imagine, for so many years she 's been her country, she' s never really made a mistake, there 's nothing disturbing around her. she is just an amazing woman, my wife is a big fan, she has warm and positive feelings to him. "

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