There’s only a slim chance his plan will work. But at least the US President is trying to change history, rather than just caretake it Tim Stanley Daily Telegraph Link First, an apology. I wrote weeks ago that Trump’s tariffs are a bargaining tool, but they’re not. They might rise or fall, but they’re here to stay – to boost US manufacturing and raise revenue while domestic taxes go down (on welfare cheques and tips). If I was taken by surprise, so was Israel – for it offered to abolish all its tariffs, assuming Trump would respond in kind, which he didn’t, for reasons I’ll try to intuit. Also in the dark was Washington. Officials reportedly prepared Trump with various tariff options; he chose the simplest and harshest, three hours ahead of his announcement, following a meeting with a handful of his biggest fans. “He’s at the peak of just not giving a f--- anymore,” a source told The Washington Post. In fact, Trump is correcting a 50-year misdirection in US life, and one tha...
The Foreign Secretary asks if the Tory leader would be equally dismissive of MPs from her own party banned from China Daily Telegraph Link David Lammy has attacked Kemi Badenoch over “cheerleading” for Israel, after it denied entry to two Labour MPs. Yuan Yang and Abtisam Mohamed were deported on Saturday, after the Israeli immigration ministry said they planned to spread “anti-Israel hatred”. The decision was labelled “unacceptable” by Mr Lammy, the Foreign Secretary, who said he had raised it with his Israeli counterparts. But Mrs Badenoch defended Israel’s right to deny the MPs entry in an interview on Sunday and said that she had not been surprised. The Conservative leader told Sky’s Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips: “I think that every country should be able to control its borders, and that’s what Israel is doing, as far as I understand. “They gave reasons why they didn’t believe that those people should come in based on their laws. And it’s really important that we respec...