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Nigel Farage’s biggest problem? Donald Trump

2 days ago
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By day 31 of the war in the Middle East, Nigel Farage had become somewhat less vocal about the closeness of his relationship with Donald Trump.“Trying to read what’s really in the minds of people in the White House right at the moment is a mug’s game,” said the MP, as he unveiled his party’s latest “pledge” to cut the cost of living on Tuesday.Perched on a stool against the backdrop of departing flights, Farage had come to Heathrow airport to promote a plan to scrap taxes on short-haul journeys.Yet when the questions inevitably came about the conflict’s potentially catastrophic impact on Britain’s economy, the Reform leader was forced to grapple with what has suddenly become the primary barrier to people voting for his party: Donald Trump.The US president is now underwater in terms of his favourability even with Reform voters, who were previously the only set of UK party supporters who saw him positively, according to polling by More in Common.

Reform’s Trump problem is particularly stark among British women, with 25% of those polled last week listing “Farage’s support for Trump” as the primary reason they would not vote for his party,Among men and women it was 23%, ahead of a range of other reasons including the party being seen as too rightwing, racism on the part of some candidates, its lack of government experience or perceptions that they only represent the rich,“From focus groups, the idea of something like [the] Minnesota [immigration raids] happening here but also the general sense of chaos he might bring in the UK is kryptonite to would-be Reform voters, particularly women and those in Reform’s ‘second 15%’, [who] they need to get close to forming a government,” said Luke Tryl, the executive director of More in Common,“They can’t understand why Farage associates with Trump, and it’s the thing that makes them more nervous about ‘rolling the dice’,”With Reform voters as vulnerable as any other – more so, in some cases – to the looming economic storm, the daily uncertainty of the war is now also becoming a problem for the party.

Even though its voters were found by YouGov to be more positive than others towards the US strikes, their expectations still tend to be negative when it comes to everything from geopolitical stability to household finances,It is a far cry from the days after the 2016 US presidential election, when the president-elect first started to moot the then Ukip leader as a man who would do a “great job” as Britain’s ambassador to the US,In the years since, Farage would routinely emphasise his ties to Trump, boasting in January last year that he had the incoming White House administration on speed dial,Asked by the Guardian on Tuesday if he was concerned that his relationship with Trump was beginning to damage him with Reform’s base, Farage responded: “‘I’m not going to lie about it, am I? I’m not going to pretend I don’t know him,I do.

“I think what he has done on the border [with Mexico] is admirable,” added Farage, who listed other supposed Trump achievements, including on the economy “certainly in the first term”, and on energy policy.“So there are things he’s done that I agree with hugely.There are other things he has done that I don’t agree with, and the American and the British public can judge that.But, you know, he is not dictating policy to me.I’m dictating policy to me.

”Earlier, the Reform leader was again less certain about Trump when asked if the president should end the war without securing the strait of Hormuz,He also appeared less assured about his own earlier belief that regime change in Iran was about to be realised, expressed at a previous Reform event in the immediate aftermath of US and Israeli strikes,“I don’t think we should take literally everything right now that Donald Trump says,” Farage said on Tuesday,“But the last thing he’s going to do, or the last thing his colleagues in the White House do, is to give the Iranians any idea of what their true intentions are and frankly, I don’t know,.

.Was it to remove nuclear capability? Was it aimed at regime change? I don’t think any of us quite know the absolute truth about that.”Whatever impact the Trump-Farage relationship has in the months and years ahead, it is a relationship that appears to be changing.Farage faced mockery at the end of the first week of the war after he announced that he was flying to Mar-a-Lago to meet Trump, only to fail to secure a meeting.
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Starmer’s threat to resident doctors is a grave mistake | Letters

While I totally disapprove, as I did last time, of the doctors’ strike but completely support their demands and grievances, it is the prime minister’s response which has made me write this letter (Keir Starmer gives resident doctors 48 hours to call off strike or lose training offer, 31 March). His threat of not creating extra training posts is shocking, inappropriate and impulsive. Though on the face of it it sounds like an innocuous response showing irritation, it is probably the most convincing evidence so far of his unfitness to govern among the litany of his other missteps.It has laid bare his government’s lack of strategy and lack of sincerity. Does he understand that, by not creating training posts, he is not only going to harm doctors’ careers, spoil thousands of young doctors’ lives and deter others from adopting this noble and vital profession, but also harm the NHS, and thus patient care? The NHS is desperately understaffed

1 day ago
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High times or low blows? Experts fail to clear air over German drug legalisation

It was a landmark piece of legislation passed by Germany’s previous, centre-left-led government: a measure that legalised the personal recreational use of cannabis for over-18s despite warnings from critics it would cause a steep rise in the drug’s use, including by teenagers, and boost criminal gangs.Two years on, controversy over the move has still not been stubbed out, with critics and proponents at odds over its impact on consumption, youth welfare and organised crime.Preliminary results from an ongoing study into the policy’s consequences, released on Wednesday, provided a mixed picture, with enough ammunition for each side to claim vindication.The MPs Carmen Wegge and Christos Pantazis of the centre-left Social Democrats (SPD) said the analysis to date showed that partial legalisation was the right approach.“The dramatic negative effects on consumption patterns or public health feared by critics have not materialised

1 day ago
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‘The manosphere is dead and no one cares about Andrew Tate any more’: the poet taking on toxic masculinity

Sam Browne’s blend of brutal honesty and droll observation has made him a viral sensation. He talks about growing up in Southend, mental health and the healing power of poetryOn a cold night in east London, 21-year-old performance poet Sam Browne is telling a packed room of strangers about his second bout of psychosis. “I was in Morocco at 18, completely alone, and I started to feel that things weren’t real,” he says. “It got so bad that one day I turned to a random person and told him I was thinking of killing myself. He just said back to me: ‘Don’t do that – you’ll miss the sunset

1 day ago
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Finally, the clitoris is getting the attention it deserves

There’s no excuse for being icliterate any more. It was a long time coming, but, almost 30 years after the web of nerves inside the penis was charted, we’ve finally got a similar 3D map of the nerves within the glans of the clitoris. You can’t see all of the nerve branches of the clitoris via dissection or clinical imaging methods, which is why this sort of visualisation is so important.Ju Young Lee, one of the researchers behind the scan, has said she’s amazed it has taken so long for a project like this to materialise. But the clitoris has long been understudied and misunderstood

1 day ago
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Revealed: the vast illegal casino network targeting UK gamblers

Calls for tougher laws as network stretching from Caribbean to Georgia generates riches for offshore tycoons by appearing to prey on the vulnerableImmaculately groomed and beaming from ear to ear, Andres Markou looks every inch the golden boy of the gambling sector. The youthful boss of MyStake, a fast-growing digital casino, has been pictured shaking hands with the Brazilian football legend Ronaldinho over a lucrative branding partnership.Elsewhere, he can be seen collecting industry awards, or offering “visionary” insights to interviewers. There is only one hurdle blocking Markou’s ascent to the very top of his trade: he does not exist.The photos seem to be AI-generated fakes and Markou, it appears, is a decoy, deflecting attention from the true faces behind a sophisticated network of illegal online casinos

1 day ago
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A ‘dress rehearsal’ for life: inside the Manchester project helping homeless men rebuild

It costs a lot to live by the canal in central Manchester, with even the pokiest of studios renting for £1,000. But in Embassy Village, the city’s newest waterside community, residents do not need to be rich. Quite the opposite, in fact. To live there, you have to be male, homeless and ready to get your life back on track.Nestled between the River Irwell and the Bridgewater canal, just across from the fashionable Castlefield district, Embassy’s 40 studio flats have been built under two Victorian viaducts carrying the city’s trams and trains

1 day ago
foodSee all
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How to turn a leftover roast lamb bone into Wales’ national dish – recipe | Waste not

1 day ago
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Australian supermarket Easter eggs taste test: ‘The quality of Easter chocolate is simply worse’

2 days ago
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What a slip-up! The shop in Orkney that accidentally ordered 38,000 bananas

2 days ago
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Ways to use mint sauce without having to roast a lamb

2 days ago
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Sami Tamimi’s recipes for slow-cooked lamb with spicy pickled lemon and jewelled Easter rice

3 days ago
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I can’t believe it’s got butter: this double-dairy ice-cream has gone viral – but how does it taste?

3 days ago