Facebook Pixel Imitation Game | Newsweek US - news - Lee esta historia en Magzter.com

Intentar ORO - Gratis

Imitation Game

Newsweek US

|

June 06 - 13, 2025 (Double Issue)

British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer raises the stakes with a Trump-style strategy—but experts warn his rightward move could be a dangerous gamble

- by HUGH CAMERON

Imitation Game

SIR KEIR STARMER HAS BEEN accused of employing anglicized forms of Trumpian rhetoric and emulating the U.S. president's stances on immigration in an apparent effort to stave off growing electoral threats from the country's truly MAGA-esque forces.

The British prime minister has channeled President Donald Trump in increasingly frequent and obvious ways. Seemingly borrowing from the Trump playbook, he pledged to “cut the weeds of regulation” in a January op-ed for The Times newspaper, reminiscent of the president's 2017 remark that “we're here today for one single reason: to cut the red tape of regulation.”

More recently, Starmer described his approach to the development of nuclear power stations in England and Wales as “build, baby, build,” echoing Trump's vow to “drill, baby, drill.”

In December 2024, he criticized government workers in the U.K. civil service, saying that while there was not a “swamp to be drained here,” too many were “comfortable in the tepid bath of managed decline.” A union leader for those workers accused him of invoking “Trumpian language.”

But toeing a tougher line on immigration has been at the center of the shift. In May, ahead of his Labour Party publishing a white paper on the issue, the prime minister accused the previous Conservative government of conducting a “one-nation experiment on open borders” and argued that without stricter controls the U.K. risked becoming “an island of strangers.”

Starmer's language drew criticism from members of his own party and was compared to Enoch Powell's 1968 speech “Rivers of Blood”—in which the Conservative MP predicted that immigration and multiculturalism would reduce citizens to “strangers in their own country” and result in the eventual death of British national identity.

When approached by

MÁS HISTORIAS DE Newsweek US

Newsweek US

Newsweek US

The Classroom Arms Race the West Is Losing to China

The West has spent billions trying to break China's grip on rare earths-critical minerals that power everything from electric vehicles to fighter jets.

time to read

1 min

June 19, 2026

Newsweek US

Newsweek US

America's Greatest Workplaces 2026

From culture and benefits to leadership and flexibility, companies on this list define what makes a workplace truly exceptional

time to read

3 mins

June 26, 2026

Newsweek US

Newsweek US

STATE OF CHANGE

Inside a Democratic Party divided by class, generation and vision, with California's high-stakes primaries testing its future direction

time to read

19 mins

June 26, 2026

Newsweek US

Newsweek US

The Coveted Perk That's Big on Shrinking

The hottest line in a job offer isn’t a signing bonus or unlimited PTO. It’s a tiny weekly injection.

time to read

1 min

June 26, 2026

Newsweek US

Newsweek US

War on Mar-a-Lago Face

On February 28, Mar-a-Lago hosted two parties at once. On one side, black-tie-clad guests sipped cocktails.

time to read

1 mins

June 26, 2026

Newsweek US

Newsweek US

TAKE FIVE

STORIES FROM AROUND THE WORLD

time to read

1 mins

June 26, 2026

Newsweek US

Newsweek US

OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS

Rather than treating Ukraine as a dependency, the U.S. should recognize it as a future strategic asset

time to read

3 mins

June 26, 2026

Newsweek US

Newsweek US

Hollywood's Sure Thing

With Disclosure Day, Steven Spielberg proves his name still outshines every star

time to read

1 min

June 26, 2026

Newsweek US

Newsweek US

Is Miami the New New York? Not So Fast

Move over Manhattan—Miami is having a moment.

time to read

1 min

June 26, 2026

Newsweek US

Newsweek US

Budget EV Battle Gets a Tiny New Driver

Mexico is shifting gears in the electric vehicle race with Olinia Uno, nudging China out of the fast lane. Announced on June 7 by President Claudia Sheinbaum, the country's first homegrown EV is being positioned as a way for Mexico to jump into the driver's seat of its own technological future.

time to read

1 min

June 26, 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size