Trump works a political miracle in Downing Street
Obscured by the deafening cacophony of incomprehension about a number of the policy innovations of the Trump administration, there are some refreshing signs of progress. The movement away from authoritarian, socialistic, Davosian, woke Western self-reproach is broadening and accelerating.
The worst-governed of the major Western
countries were the first to move: Giorgia Meloni in Italy and Javier Milei in
Argentina, and both are progressing well. Then came the mighty Trump victory
over all the chicanery and corruption of the impenetrably complacent and
shameless bipartisan Washington establishment.
The
scurrilous allegation of collusion with Russia, the spurious impeachments, the
likely theft of the 2020 election through millions of unverifiable harvested
ballots, the rank fiction that he had attempted an insurrection at the US
Capitol, when he had in fact offered National Guard security and warned that
hooligans might be a problem, the scandalous self-abasement of the national
political media and most of the polling organisations, and the perversion of
the intelligence agencies and the criminal justice system in totalitarian
harassment of the former president, topped out by presumably spontaneous
assassination attempts made more dangerous by the utter incompetence of the
Secret Service: all of it rejected by the country.
Former
president Trump, outspent two to one and opposed by 95 percent of a
rabidly partisan and unprofessional national political press corps, was
acquitted of all charges and returned to the headship of the American people by
the largest jury in history, 78 million people.
The Germans,
ever cautious, commendably so given the difficulties that late-unified country
has had behaving responsibly as Europe’s most powerful nation, has moved
sensibly to the Right. The new chancellor Friedrich Merz is a Reaganite though
he clearly finds the next step in American political evolution to Trump a
daunting leap in these early days.
But in some
ways the most astounding course correction appears to be underway in the United
Kingdom. Margaret Thatcher was, next to Mr. Churchill, the greatest British
leader of the 20th century and as she had promised, she put
“Great” back together with “Britain”. But she could not prevent the division of
her party between Euro-federalists and supporters of a sovereign United Kingdom
in the European Common Market.
And she
never developed a natural successor. John Major was a good man and a fairly
good prime minister but did not have the stature to lead a united government.
Tony Blair took the Labour Party far from the extremes that so terribly damaged
Britain under Harold Wilson, but New Labour was really just old Labour on the
instalment plan. Gordon Brown, David Cameron, Theresa May, Boris Johnson, Liz
Truss, Rishi Sunak and the early Keir Starmer, whatever their merits in other
roles and as individuals, were failed prime ministers. It was a procession of
inadequacy at the head of the government more prolonged and numerous than any
in the history of the office of prime minister of the United Kingdom going back
to Robert Walpole in 1721.
But
something astounding has occurred. The first three months of Starmer’s
government beginning in July of last year produced a spectacle of stupefying
incompetence. Foreign Secretary David Lammy managed to humiliate the United
Kingdom in the heretofore unheard of Chagos Islands.
Chancellor
Rachel Reeves produced a budget that appeared to be carefully designed to
throttle the stumbling British economy. And the regime leapt with the alacrity
of a trained athlete into the tawdry practices of influence-peddling and petty
corruption. But Starmer appeared to have the treacherous path ahead of him
illuminated by President Trump, whom he and several of his senior colleagues
had previously gratuitously disparaged. In quick succession, Starmer slashed
his foreign aid bill in half and directed that money to national defence,
promising that Britain will become an overachiever on its NATO pledge of two
per cent of GDP to the military. He speaks of going to four per cent.
Best of all,
£600 million annually of national health service bureaucracy was amputated, a
move so brilliant and necessary that it was not much criticised by the official
opposition, who after a great deal of hot air about streamlining the National
Health Service, did absolutely nothing in that direction in their previous 14
years of government. There followed a statement of intent to cut welfare
benefit by £5 million annually. The British Labour Party has suddenly become an
agent for defending the country, ceasing to assist people who are not actually
in need of medical assistance, and trimming away welfare cheats and putting the
interests of the citizens of the country ahead of those whom the country fails
to prevent from entering the country illegally in large numbers.
This was the
fruit of Starmer’s visit to the White House, and he will be back soon to
negotiate a trade deal with Trump. I was one of those who saw that the security
of Western civilisation required that Trump evict the mockery of an
administration which had usurped his position, but I did not imagine that he
would have such a success as an evangelist of political common sense and
straight talk. Let no one contemplating 10 and 11 Downing Street doubt the
existence of political miracles.
https://brusselssignal.eu/2025/04/trump-works-a-political-miracle-in-downing-street/
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