Trump: We’ll end Ukraine war and strike ‘quick’ trade deal with the UK

President Trump has offered Sir Keir Starmer a trade deal that could exempt the UK from being hit with American tariffs as he hailed the “wonderful” relationship between the two nations.

The US president and Starmer announced that talks on a “new economic deal” were under way and Trump said that they could happen “very quickly” during a joint press conference in the White House.

Trump also talked up the prospect of an end to the war in Ukraine, saying: “I think we’ll have two deals. I think we’ll have a deal on ending the war and I think we’re going to end up with a great trade deal with you.”

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Why Gen Z hates Britain

Patriotism is considered provincial

Should we get there, it’s strange to imagine Gen Z in our twilight years. Will our women, scraggly stick-and-poke tattoos blooming over wrinkled arms, still call each other “diva” in their knitting circles? Will the men, swapping gurning to EDM for glacial aquarobics sessions in the local leisure centre, still have their mullets? Will everyone die from vaping at 50?

And, most unknowably, will we import our globalised, post-MeToo, post-BLM politics into the 2070s and beyond? I suspect not. The newest crop of pensioners, who came of age in the late Seventies and early Eighties, was as ever far more likely to vote Conservative than their younger compatriots in last year’s general election. Though each successive wave of bus-pass-holders is likely to be more tolerant — or less baffled, at least — on social issues, the inevitable slide Right is a product of shifting priorities, towards pensions, winter-fuel payments and the ability to secure a doctor’s appointment. Gen Z will not be an exception: a cynical view is that the politics of self-interest always supersede voguish causes, such as quibbling over the definitions of identity, as one heads towards the Stannah stairlift.

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Never Had It So Bad: The Decline of the Great British Empire

The British Empire is now experiencing a drastic decline as they prioritize a soft power that banks on promoting a culture no one wants to emulate.

It was during a Tory rally on July 20, 1957, organized to commemorate 25 years of public service by Alan Tindal Lennox-Boyd, 1st Viscount Boyd of Merton as MP for the constituency of bucolic Mid Bedfordshire, that British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan uttered his famous pronouncement that Britons had “never had it so good.” Having ridden into office on a wave of popular discontent with the “doctrinaire nightmare” of Labourite socialism, Macmillan could proudly direct his compatriots to “go around the country, go to the industrial towns, go to the farms and you will see a state of prosperity such as we have never had in my lifetime — nor indeed in the history of this country.”

Go around that same country today, to mouldering industrial towns like Bradford and Luton, and you will search in vain for the state of contented prosperity described by Macmillan, though you will find, on the litter-bestrewn high streets, plenty of pound shops and vape shops, Dawah centers and remittance services, and Palestinian flags as far as the eye can see. As for the farms Macmillan praised so highly, they are dwindling in number and size with farmers being crushed by lower output prices, reduced yields, and skyrocketing costs, and subjected to a Labour dekulakization campaign redolent of Maoism or Stalinism. The cost-of-living crisis is in full swing. The NHS is in shambles. Schools are crumbling, literally and figuratively, before their pupils’ and instructors’ eyes. Violent crime and public disorder incidents are on the rise. The Victorian-era sewer network has finally reached a breaking point, leaking untreated sewage into lakes, rivers, and seas at an alarming rate. Climate change policies are close to achieving something unprecedented: a “zero-industrial society.” The British Armed Forces are suffering from a recruitment crisis, stockpile shortages, and a total lack of combat preparedness. The Chelsea Partridges have shut down (arguably the most unkindest cut of all). The official portrait of King Charles III, appropriately enough, looks like an insane fever dream.

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Pupils should not be taught ‘greatness’ of British Empire

Children should stop being taught about the “greatness of the British Empire” as part of the Government’s curriculum shake-up, Bridget Phillipson has been told.

The Telegraph analysed almost 70 submissions from leading education groups to the Government’s curriculum and assessment review, which is due to publish its initial findings in “early 2025”.

The review will consider a root-and-branch overhaul of the current education system in England, from the first year of primary school until children turn 18.

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Gen Z doubts about democracy laid bare in ‘worrying’ survey

More than half believe the UK should be a dictatorship and there’s a stark gender divide over equality, research for Channel 4 shows

Most young people are in favour of turning the UK into a dictatorship, according to a “deeply worrying” study, which has revealed an acceptance of authoritarianism and radicalism among Generation Z.

Fifty-two per cent of Gen Z — people aged between 13 and 27 — said they thought “the UK would be a better place if a strong leader was in charge who does not have to bother with parliament and elections”.

Thirty-three per cent suggested the UK would be better off “if the army was in charge”.

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Britain’s post-imperial delusion

We can no longer rely on our American Cousins

I only salvaged a few objects from my late dad’s home when it was cleared. But these included two that could be said to bookend his era of British history. The first was a barometer, presented to a Harrington ancestor “by his colleagues at HM Customs Harwich” in 1903. The second was a 1969 edition of the collected political speeches of Enoch Powell.

The barometer stands for Britain’s seafaring heyday, at which time most vessels would have carried one. Even for a bureaucrat such as my forebear, documenting the fruits of that seaborne trade in the Customs House in Harwich, this object would have been richly symbolic of the peculiar mix of risk-taking and scientific pedantry that characterised our island’s maritime tradition.

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It’s time to become the 51st state of the US

We need to get Brexit done properly. Let’s finally face up to reality and put our Maga hats on

‘The Briton… should cheerfully acquiesce in the decree of Destiny, and stand in betimes with the conquering American.” So said William Thomas Stead, the prominent Victorian newspaperman and strident reformer.

Stead looked at Britain’s colonial apotheosis with apprehension, understanding that the growth of new great powers meant “we can never again be the first”. As his countrymen grew fat and complacent on the spoils of imperial decadence, Stead saw clearly that the only avoidance of incipient decline would come by uniting our fortunes with those who had passed us in the great race.

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Why I’m leaving the UK

Prissy moralists have killed artistic licence

The United Kingdom is a totalitarian hellscape. Freedom of speech has been all but abolished. Our police forces are now indistinguishable from the Gestapo. Criticism of the government will soon be illegal under imminent laws against thought crime. It will not be long before artists, political dissidents and other freethinkers will be rounded up and tossed into gulags…

Even with my love of melodrama, I cannot sustain such histrionics. While it’s enjoyable to momentarily inhabit the caricature of the Andrew Doyle that exists in the minds of my detractors, the truth is far less exciting. On a recent appearance on the Jordan B. Peterson podcast, I let it be known that I am leaving the United Kingdom to work with the actor and comedian Rob Schneider on a new production company called No Apologies Media. Some of my friends have assumed that I am flouncing away out of a desperate conviction that all is lost. The reality is a little more nuanced.

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Ireland, U.K. becoming ‘dangerous’ for people with disabilities

“Many doctors in Ireland, and groups representing disabled people and older people, are not in favour of assisted dying legislation. They have deep concerns about what happened in Belgium, the Netherlands and Canada which have seen expansion upon expansion of the grounds for assisted suicide and euthanasia. Diminishing services prolong and increase older, disabled and sick people’s suffering to the extent that many now feel they can no longer live a valuable and productive life.”

She referred to it as “euthanasia by stealth.”

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The immigration figures tell a story of elite failure

Mass migration has been embraced to plug the gaps in a stuttering, low-wage economy.

Remember when we were told that Brexit would lead to a draw-bridge Britain, closed to migrants forever more? That particular Remainer scare story is now, officially, defunct.

This week, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) revealed that 728,000 more people came to live in the UK than had left in the year to June 2024. That’s three to four times the net migration the UK averaged annually during the 2010s. To put that into context, nearly the same number of people arrived in the UK in a single year as live in the entire county of Suffolk.

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Petition for another UK general election passes 2m signatures

Elon Musk has said the British public has “had enough of a tyrannical police state” as a petition calling for a general election passes two million signatures.

The billionaire entrepreneur and Donald Trump ally, 53, posted on his social media platform X on Sunday afternoon to share his support for the petition criticising Sir Keir Starmer’s government.

h/t DS

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Arresting Netanyahu in UK would be unlawful, warns shadow attorney general and lawyers

Netanyahu Gallant Poster Tehran

Arresting Benjamin Netanyahu would be unlawful, the shadow attorney general and two of Britain’s leading lawyers have warned.

Lord Wolfson KC, the shadow attorney general, has written to his Government counterpart, Lord Hermer KC, saying the UK would be in breach of international law if the Government sought to enact the International Criminal Court’s (ICC) arrest warrant for the Israeli leader if he came to the UK.

His view that UK laws give the Israeli prime minister immunity from being arrested was backed by Prof Richard Ekins, a professor of law and constitutional government at Oxford University, and Lord Verdirame KC, a specialist in public international law.

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Why Again Do We Still Have a Special Relationship With the Tyrannical UK?

America and the United Kingdom have long had a special relationship, working closely as allies to protect the West from oppressive dictatorships that suppress their own people, arbitrarily jailing them and persecuting them for exercising their God-given right of free speech. Here’s the problem. The UK has become one of those oppressive dictatorships that suppress their own people, arbitrarily jailing them and persecuting them for exercising their God-given right of free speech. And I’m not particularly interested in having a special relationship with a country like that. Nor are many other Americans.

Luckily they’re stuck with us and vice versa. h/t DS

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Why Elon Musk hates Starmer’s Britain

In 2012, the Tesla tycoon Elon Musk took a Boris bike on a tour around London bathing in the Olympics love-in, declaring to his Twitter followers that “I really like Britain!”.

Musk had good reason to be pleased that year, having made his first appearance on the prestigious Forbes Billionaire List – with a modest £1.58 billion fortune.

Twelve years later, Musk’s fortune is valued at $251 billion (£191 billion), thanks to Tesla becoming the world’s largest car company. But, jarringly, his valuation of the UK appears to have gone into reverse gear.

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