Youngian wrote: ↑Wed Feb 04, 2026 7:38 pm
The Weeping Angel wrote: ↑Wed Feb 04, 2026 6:52 pm
I don't think he does; he's not a secret CIA spy, he just appointed someone he shouldn't have to be ambassador to the US.
No one's accused Starmer of being a spy but is he still a deluded Atlanticist? Like a mad ex who's been dumped but won't leave you alone.
Trump can't make it any plainer that the US is now a transactional power divesting from Europe. Forging deeper tech and defence ties with US in this new paradigm makes little sense economically or geopolitically. Starmer hasn't commented on Carney's Davos speech, maybe he had his fingers in his ears shouting la la la...
And on a personal level Trump doesn't respect arse kissers.
This is very unfair. How is Starmer, with his stance on Ukraine, Greenland, Palestine a "Trump arse kisser"? And the idea that Trump sees strong opposition and "respects" it, will be news to Adam Schiff, Mark Kelly and a few others. They're targeted precisely because they went after Trump, not because they were weak arse kissers.
Starmer's spent more time on EU relations than any Prime Minister did when we were in the EU. The pivot on trade is pretty clear. He's tried to lead on common defence, but a minority of EU members preferred to piss about, to the chagrin of other EU members. But hopefully that improves.
Tech is the only area really where you could say that the UK is going with the US over Europe. Does that make Starmer Atlanticist? Or somebody just going with where the jobs are- European tech is barely at the races. This is certainly a risk, but US tech will drop Trump as fast as it dropped DEI if it has to. And Trump is very, very unpopular.