मैगज़्टर गोल्ड के साथ असीमित हो जाओ

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Still uncertain about Trump? Let Boris Johnson guide you on this 'very compassionate man'

The Observer

|

March 09, 2025

It’s heartening that the terrifying, grim reality of the president’s actions are so invigorating to some of his Tory fans

- Catherine Bennett

Still uncertain about Trump? Let Boris Johnson guide you on this 'very compassionate man'

Short of emigration, what is the best option for Britain’s dazzled Trump followers now their hero confirms he is not Europe's ally but Vladimir Putin’s? That's assuming what we can’t in the case of Nigel Farage MP: that they do not share the US president’s well-documented weakness for a genocidal invader. Even his more respectable British acolytes have until recently finessed, quite successfully, their love of Trump with his long history of Putin- pleasing. No one more so than Boris Johnson, former prime minister, self-styled saviour of Ukraine and still Trump’s most dependable British idiot.

To Johnson's way of thinking, detailed in numerous Daily Mail columns, it is Trump-doubters who are always the ridiculous, panicking, hysterical, whingeing headless chickens. When Trump looked likely to win the US election, Johnson likened the reaction of the “western liberal intelligentsia” to “the shriek of elderly beldames leaping on the piano stool after spying a mouse in their petticoats”. The virile Johnson was more than willing to forget that business at the US Capitol on 6 January 2021.

With all the usual caveats, it is striking, sometimes uncanny, how often tributes to Trump by his UK supporters have echoed rhetoric in praise of an earlier political disruptor with territorial ambitions.

Here is Lord Rothermere, the Daily Mail proprietor, for instance, writing in 1930 that his support for Germany’s Nazi party “had shocked the old women of three countries - France, Germany, and our own”. Like the beldame-connoisseur Johnson, who urges us to disregard Trump's thuggery - “I have always found him, personally, a model of old-fashioned courtesy and good manners” - Rothermere would assure readers that the private Hitler was “a perfect gentleman”, who “brings to Europe the blessed prospect of peace”.

The Observer से और कहानियाँ

The Observer

Lion's mane jellyfish

Brandy! Brandy! Oil, opium, morphia! Anything to ease this infernal agony! Seems a bit over the top to me, but that's fiction for you (see The Adventure of the Lion's Mane by Conan Doyle).

time to read

2 mins

September 21, 2025

The Observer

The Observer

The United Nations is on its knees, but still breathing and still liberal

From Gaza to Trump, the challenges mount. But ahead of its general assembly this week, the organisation remains the last hope for many people across the world

time to read

6 mins

September 21, 2025

The Observer

In a digital world, the use of outdated stats simply doesn't add up

Our economy gauges were invented in the last century. We need a system that works now, writes Zachary Karabell

time to read

3 mins

September 21, 2025

The Observer

UK to build 12 nuclear plants in £10bn plan

The announcement last week that a dozen new nuclear power stations are to be built in Hartlepool is unlike anything else that has been attempted in the UK.

time to read

2 mins

September 21, 2025

The Observer

The Observer

Heated debate: why Churchill's birthplace lies at the heart of UK solar battle

Row over plans to build 2 million panels on land around historic Blenheim Palace has become symbolic of a national struggle. Architecture critic Rowan Moore reports

time to read

8 mins

September 21, 2025

The Observer

Trump's assault on the media goes into overdrive

Donald Trump has warned that media outlets that are \"against\" him could be punished as his administration's crackdown on opponents intensifies after the assassination of Charlie Kirk, raising fears for freedom of speech in America.

time to read

3 mins

September 21, 2025

The Observer

Digital ID, two-child cap, taxes... Starmer on front foot to save his leadership

The prime minister’s supporters say he’s got the message and will mount a spirited defence at party conference. For others it’s too little, too late, writes Rachel Sylvester

time to read

4 mins

September 21, 2025

The Observer

The Observer

Liberal Hollywood shuffles into a dark night after elegiac Emmys

Can awards shows tell us anything about the state of a nation? Attending the 2025 Emmys last Sunday, there were times when it felt like the answer was an unequivocal: hell yes.

time to read

4 mins

September 21, 2025

The Observer

The Observer

One village, one week in the war for the West Bank

What began with an attack by settlers led to the death of a teenager and ended with a brutal IDF siege. As the UK prepares to recognise Palestinian statehood, Isabel Coles' report from al-Mughayyir shows why it may never be attained

time to read

11 mins

September 21, 2025

The Observer

The Observer

FakeX - criminals hijack interest in Musk's company to defraud investors

Online fraudsters are stealing the identities of investment firms to con millions out of people wanting a slice of Elon Musk's space unicorn.

time to read

5 mins

September 21, 2025

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