• Re: The Protesters Are Right. The British People Hate President Trump -

    From super70s@21:1/5 to AlleyCat on Tue Sep 5 15:13:03 2023
    XPost: can.politics, alt.politics.liberalism, alt.politics.democrats
    XPost: alt.politics.usa.republican

    On 2023-09-05 18:23:04 +0000, AlleyCat said:

    Why Brits hate Trump. (see below ****************)

    Thousands of protesters march against Trump in London
    Published Fri, Jul 13 2018, 5:25 AM EDT
    Natasha Turak
    CNBC

    Protests have kicked off for the second day of President Donald Trump's
    U.K. visit as thousands of demonstrators rally in central London and
    cities around the country.

    Today's gatherings in London, which organizers say should number
    between 50,000 and 100,000 people, will count among more than 60
    official protests scheduled for the American leader's four-day working
    visit.

    Their aim, organizers say, is to voice opposition to Trump's policies
    and show that he is not welcome. British animosity to Trump has been
    fairly prominent since his election in 2016, and these protests would
    not be the first -- thousands gathered in central London in January of
    2017 to protest his travel ban on several majority-Muslim countries.

    In the months that followed, 1.8 million Brits signed a petition to
    Parliament against a state visit by the president. This week's sojourn
    is a working visit rather than a state one, despite Trump's planned
    meeting with Queen Elizabeth II.

    CNBC spoke with Asad Rehman, a local activist and member of the
    recently-formed Stop Trump Coalition. He described the demonstrations
    as a "carnival of resistance," representing a broad range of interests
    with one core message.

    "People are coming out to reject the politics of bigotry and hatred,
    the Muslim ban, (Trump's) war on migrants, normalization of violence
    against women, but they're also coming out because they disagree with
    his attacks on the poor, on his economic policies, on his pulling back
    from human rights, on his planet-wrecking policies," Rehman said.

    "But at its heart it's a rejection of the kind of politics he
    represents, which unfortunately we're seeing an echo of around the
    world."

    Rehman stressed that while their message was anti-Trump, the U.K.'s
    "special relationship" remained with the American people.

    Trump has so far appeared unfazed by the expected protests.

    "I think it's fine. I like a lot of people in the U.K. I think they
    agree with me on immigration," he told media from Brussels on Thursday.
    But in a U.K. media interview with later in the day, he said that they
    made him feel unwelcome.

    "I used to love London as a city. I haven't been there in a long time.
    But when they make you feel unwelcome, why would I stay there?" he told
    British tabloid The Sun.

    The president, a longtime supporter of Brexit, awkwardly prefaced his
    visit by warning that Prime Minister Theresa May's "soft" Brexit plan
    could kill a potential U.S.-U.K. trade deal and suggesting that recently-resigned Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson would make a "great"
    prime minister. Tensions between the age-old allies are already high
    following Trump's imposition of trade tariffs on the EU, which May
    called "unjustified."

    'Unquestionable pressure' on security

    Security around London during Trump's visit has amounted to a massive
    bill for the U.K. taxpayer, estimated at more than 12 million pounds
    ($15.8 million). At least 4,000 police officers will be deployed around
    the city, with many from other regions of the country forced to cut
    their leave to work overtime in London. Organizers, meanwhile, promise
    peaceful and family-friendly protests. The U.K.'s terror threat level
    remains at "severe."

    The U.K. Police Federation has described Trump's visit as putting "unquestionable pressure" on the country's police forces.

    Protests began Thursday but in underwhelming numbers, as just a few
    hundred lined up near Winfield House with signs and placards. London's Metropolitan Police will have officials figures from Friday's
    demonstrations later in the day, and it's yet to be seen whether the 50,000-plus estimate will be met.

    Flying over London will be the now-famous "Trump Baby" blimp, a giant
    inflated caricature of Trump as a diaper-donning toddler, now trending
    as #TrumpBaby. Organizers raised more than 30,000 pounds ($40,000) to
    pay for its manufacture and inflation, and London Mayor Sadiq Khan controversially has allowed for it to be flown up to 30 feet over the parliament gardens. Khan and Trump have had a number of public spats
    over differences on immigration, gun laws and counter-terrorism.

    Those angry at Trump are gathering outside the BBC's offices in
    Portland Place, before marching down to Trafalgar Square for a rally at
    5 p.m. local time (midday ET).

    A further 10,000 people are expected to take part in a separate women's
    march along exactly the same protest route, earlier on the same day.
    That demonstration will end with its own rally in Parliament Square
    between 2 p.m. and 4 p.m London time.

    Popular opposition among Brits to an American president is not without precedent. The presidency of George W. Bush was marked with numerous
    protests in the U.K. in opposition to the Iraq War, and a mass protest
    in London in February of 2003 attracted more than 750,000 people,
    according to police estimates.

    Despite today's high-profile gatherings, many in the U.K. still remain supportive of Trump, particularly members of right-wing political
    parties. Trump's higher profile friends in the country include former
    UKIP (U.K. Independence Party) leader Nigel Farage, Boris Johnson, and controversial businessman and political donor Arron Banks.

    A recent YouGov poll revealed that while only 16 percent of Brits would
    have voted for Trump given the chance and 77 percent view him
    unfavorably, half of all respondents felt the visit should take place
    compared to 37 percent who wanted it cancelled, and 44 percent think
    the government should still try to work with him.

    - CNBC's David Reid contributed to this article.

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