Tag: JD Vance

  • What the UK can learn from Trump’s second term

    What the UK can learn from Trump’s second term

    When John Swinney, the Scottish National Party leader, and former ambassador Peter Mandelson visited Donald Trump in the Oval Office a few months ago, the President showed them three different models for his planned renovation of the East Wing of the White House, which he has demolished to build a new ballroom. “If you’re going to do it,” Scotland’s First Minister suggested, “you might as well go big.”

    This Wednesday marked one year since Trump’s election victory, and going big captures the essence of his second term – bold and controversial moves, which have impressed even British politicians who thought him reckless in his first term. When Trump visited Chequers, the British Prime Minister’s country residence, on his state visit to the United Kingdom in September, one senior official told him: “You’re the most consequential president of my lifetime.”

    It has not all been decorous. Convention, tradition and the law have been subordinated to delivery. The East Wing redevelopment is a case in point. “When they were bulldozing, they came across some Jefferson-era brick,” explains one White House watcher. “They kept going.” Why tiptoe around the author of the Declaration of Independence when there is a real estate deal to complete?

    And yet the Trumpites see themselves as like the founding fathers, forging a new nation. “The bricks have become trophies,” says one Washingtonian. “It’s like people keeping chunks of the Berlin Wall.” Just as that was torn down, so Trump’s second term, much more radical and (so far) successful than the first, has been one of discontinuity and disruption.

    After speaking to more than a dozen British and American officials, aides to the President and the Prime Minister Keir Starmer, civil servants, former diplomats in both countries, pollsters and political strategists, it is clear there is much that Trump II can teach Britain. In his first term, Trump was held back by staff who didn’t share his world view and the claims of Russian interference in the 2016 election. This year, he issued hundreds of executive orders and successfully brought migration to a halt at the Mexican border. Private polling circulating in the highest reaches of the Republican party shows that even 22 percent of those who voted for Kamala Harris a year ago support what Trump is doing on immigration.

    Those who helped him triumph say Trump II is very different from Trump I, in that he “brought in a team which supports his agenda” and his chief of staff, Susie Wiles, enforced a rigorous policy of loyalty to the President. “In this administration everyone has to be loyal to everyone,” a Washington-based diplomat observes. “There is no infighting, it’s simply not allowed.”

    This unity of purpose and direction has given Trump the ability to “move fast and break things” – and even the British in Washington, who were horrified in 2016, seem energized by his example this time around.

    “Think about the speed at which we’ve been able to move,” says one White House official. “We’ve cut out so much infighting and been able to execute. In the first term a lot of cabinet members thought they should be president. We also found there were a lot of unnecessary layers in the bureaucracy. Now the President gets the right people in the room, and if we need to move fast we will. We didn’t want to be Tony Blair, after a long campaign saying, ‘What do we do now?’ on day one. The President said he wanted the ‘big beautiful bill’ passed by July 4. There was a mentality to get things done. That was very different this time.”

    These are lessons that it is now too late for Labour to learn, after 16 months in power. This is a government that never seemed clear on what it wanted to achieve at the beginning, nor, as things have deteriorated, on what to do next. In Washington, every-one knows what Trump wants. Keir Starmer has been unable to provide similar clarity.

    However, Trump II is providing a blueprint for Reform UK party leader Nigel Farage, another populist insurgent, on how to seize power and then use it effectively in the face of a hostile political establishment.

    Key players in the White House and the MAGA movement say that Farage must be ready on day one, as Trump was, to impose his power on the permanent civil service. That could mean ramming legislation through parliament in a single day to give Downing Street the ability to issue emergency orders as well as immediately publish bills on key issues.

    Dominic Cummings, a chief adviser to former prime minister Boris Johnson, who has discussed how to reshape Britain’s civil service with Farage, wrote on Sunday: “A true strategy needs defined goals, a plan for controlling the government and building a team… It should include writing key primary legislation well in advance of an election.”

    In Trump’s case, key policy proposals were worked up by the Heritage Foundation thinktank and the America First Policy Institute, who also identified people who could be drafted in to work on them in government. “They had hundreds of executive orders ready to go,” says one who admired Trump’s preparations. “Susie Wiles said, ‘The President wants to deliver on migration, tariffs and tech,’ and worked out who could deliver it. She sent Stephen Miller to go after woke stuff and [Robert] Lighthizer to work on tariffs. She sent the attorney general’s office to go after the people who tried to shaft Trump in the first term. The orders went out, the foot soldiers did their thing. It was a masterclass.”

    Asked how Reform UK could prepare for power, Sebastian Gorka, the White House head of counterterrorism, says: “That’s easy. Be even more like President Trump.”

    While curbing migration was a central election pledge, Trump’s more notable achievements have come in the international arena. From the once queasy Europeans there is mostly admiration for the ceasefire in Gaza, and for Trump’s decision to attack Iranian nuclear sites with bunker buster bombs.

    “What they’ve done in the Middle East with Netanyahu and Hamas is pretty impressive,” one British official says. Security sources say the attack did not destroy Iran’s nuclear program, as Trump has claimed, but he has “trimmed them” and delayed them by “a few years.” More importantly: “He’s demonstrated they can do it. The bottom line is that they can do it again – and they will.”

    After months of playing footsie with Vladimir Putin, Trump also seems to have finally lost patience with the Russian President and has moved to impose sanctions. “He’s genuinely putting pressure on Putin now,” a Foreign Office source says. “At Chequers he was so angry at him.”

    Trump told Starmer: “I thought he was a good guy, I thought I could do a deal with him, but every time we agree something his people then renege on it.”

    In many ways, the “special relationship” is in rude health. UK and American sources say Jonathan Powell, officially Starmer’s national security adviser and unofficially the head of UK foreign policy, helped with the substance of the Gaza deal, alongside his old boss Tony Blair, Trump’s special envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff and the President’s son-in-law Jared Kushner.

    When Trump hit Russia’s two largest oil companies, Rosneft and Lukoil, he did so just days after Britain sanctioned the same firms. “We were able to give Witkoff a palette of options when the President was deciding what to do,” a senior UK government source says. “And we’re prepared to talk Trump’s language on tariffs.”

    The proto-populist Trump and the cautious, legalistic Starmer are odd bedfellows, but insiders say the relationship is still strong. One witness to their exchanges says, “Keir agrees with him as far as he can and then he’ll say, ‘I disagree on that but let me explain why we see things differently.’ Trump looks at him and listens and says, ‘OK.’”

    Keeping a volatile President on side has been one of the signal successes, if not the signal success, of Starmer’s premiership, but there are some cracks in the paintwork. “President Trump likes winners,” says a Trump aide who follows British politics, “and Starmer is beginning to look like a loser.” On areas of domestic policy Trump has become more outspoken in recent months about what he sees as Britain’s sclerotic economic approach, as well as the failure to exploit energy resources in the North Sea. “The President tore him a new one on this stuff in private at Chequers,” a US official says.

    Among the MAGA fraternity in Trump’s team – including the Vice-President J.D. Vance, Miller and Gorka – there are also concerns that the UK has allowed mass migration to dilute its cultural heritage. All three have an Atlanticist Judeo-Christian concept of western civilization in which American democracy stands in a direct line of descent from Magna Carta, the rule of law and trial by jury.

    Vance has spoken about the erosion of free speech in Europe. Miller is urging British officials to limit migration, as America did between the 1920s and 1970s, to allow new arrivals to be properly integrated. He sees Islamist imports from the tribal areas of Pakistan as a cultural challenge Britain will need to deal with. They cite the fact that the FBI was set up to combat the Mafia, who along with millions of Italian migrants arrived in the US in the 19th century. This is uncomfortable territory for many in No. 10, but one senior figure says: “If your friends are telling you something out of concern, then perhaps we should listen.”

    On illegal migration in particular, the Americans find the inability of the government to prevent cross-Channel crossings inexplicable. Asked what Trump would do, one source suggests: “Tell the French that British intelligence officers and special forces will destroy the boats before they sail. Slash them with knives, use snipers. Burn down the warehouses of the gangs, use cyber to attack their communications.”

    The most acute source of tension was the forced departure of Peter Mandelson as ambassador to Washington over his friendship with the convicted pedophile Jeffrey Epstein. While Mandelson was an adept operator, some in the President’s circle never forgave his historic anti-Trump comments. Trump’s campaign manager Chris LaCivita publicly condemned the appointment (and privately told British friends that Mandelson was doomed to fail because he had criticized Trump). US officials say White House aides boycotted dinners at Mandelson’s official residence at the instigation of Wiles, though some did meet him outside. “There was great irritation that Mandelson was rammed through in the dying days of the Biden administration,” a source close to the White House reveals.

    Mandelson was initially saved by Mark Burnett, the British-born Apprentice producer who is Trump’s envoy to the UK. He convinced Trump that Mandelson was contrite. A US diplomat says: “Mark knew a rejection would be awkward for Morgan McSweeney [Starmer’s chief of staff],” who had pushed Mandelson’s case. The episode suggests the Trump team, often depicted as a bull in a China shop with allies, actually has a sophisticated and sympathetic understanding of No. 10’s internal issues.

    Insiders say LaCivita will probably run “opposition research” on any new candidate for ambassador. “Do not pick someone who has, at any point, gone on the record to criticize Trump,” the US diplomat says. That rules out Mark Sedwill, the former cabinet secretary, who has denounced Trump publicly for “blundering” and “capriciousness with allies.” It is understood that he has not actually applied.

    Those with their hats in the ring include Christian Turner, the political director at the UK government’s Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office, and Simon Manley, who was ambassador to the World Trade Organization and the United Nations in Geneva until July, plus a British Ministry of Defence official. Oliver Robbins, the British Foreign Office permanent secretary, is expected to give Starmer a list of those who are “appointable” by the end of the month.

    Varun Chandra, Starmer’s business liaison man, who played a key role in ensuring that Britain got reduced tariffs, is widely seen as the frontrunner. The US diplomat says Chandra got his current role because Mark Burnett told Starmer’s team that “he knows how to talk to Americans.” A second source says: “Lutnick loves him, Bessent loves him, Susie Wiles loves him.” It is also said that James Roscoe, the acting ambassador, is well plugged in with the White House; US officials say Trump “likes him” and they hope he remains in some capacity.

    The final area of potential tension is China, where Trump is trying to neutralize Beijing’s control of the global market in rare earth minerals, while Starmer is desperate to go to China to secure investment. Labour is embroiled in the fallout from the recent collapse of the trial of two suspected Chinese spies and Beijing’s demand that it be allowed to build its vast new embassy in London, which many view as a security risk. “It’s been made clear by Beijing that Keir’s trip to China is contingent on them getting the embassy,” a government source says.

    Many in Washington are skeptical about whether the economic spoils of cozying up to Beijing will be worth the political costs. When UK Chancellor Rachel Reeves visited China she only secured investments worth £600 million ($785 million), a rounding error in government finances. By contrast, whoever becomes ambassador to the US will try to hurry into play the £150 billion ($196 billion) pledged by US companies as part of the recent UK-US tech deal, which Chandra and Mandelson helped secure.

    It is not all good news for Trump. On economic matters he has a lot of the same problems as Labour: stubbornly high inflation, a sluggish job market and (as the election of the socialist Zohran Mamdani as mayor of New York City shows) facing a left-wing populist surge like the one fueling support for the Green party in Britain.

    Both Trump and Starmer face crunch elections next year: the Prime Minister in the Welsh, Scottish and council elections, the President in the midterms. A big defeat might cost Starmer his job. If the Republicans lose control of Congress, Trump might well face fresh indictments from his political opponents or another impeachment charge. The loss of the Virginia and New Jersey governor races on Tuesday night points to a tough road ahead. The polling circulating among Republicans shows the Democrats winning the House of Representatives by a single seat next year, but predicts Trump will hang on after redistricting electoral boundaries.

    On Tuesday, Rachel Reeves rolled the pitch for massive tax rises in the Budget, blaming her economic inheritance, but even Labour insiders found her unconvincing. A source close to Downing Street characterized the Chancellor’s argument as: “Don’t blame me, I’m just the Chancellor. We have no power, we are just the government.”

    Trump also has a big speech on the economy this week, and there are similar stirrings in MAGA world. “The numbers are shifting on the economy,” says a prominent Trump ally. “I think people are concerned. They’re not feeling like prices are much lower. We’ve done a lot of international stuff. We need a pivot to the economy.” However, the Republican pollster says Trump’s early success and his decisiveness mean that even those feeling the pinch are still prepared to give him the benefit of the doubt: “People are feeling worse off but they think he has a plan.”

    The same, demonstrably, is not true of Labour, where Starmer’s failure to “go big,” as Trump has done, has left Labour vulnerable. Perhaps Starmer should draw up plans to bulldoze part of Downing Street.

  • When foreign-policy critique becomes blood libel

    When foreign-policy critique becomes blood libel

    “I’m a Christian man,” the college student at the University of Mississippi said to J.D. Vance, our future 48th (or 49th) President, during a TPUSA event attended by thousands. Uh-oh, here we go.

    “And I’m just confused why there’s this notion that we might owe Israel something… or that they’re our greatest ally or that we have to support this multi-hundred-billion-dollar foreign aid package to Israel… to quote Charlie Kirk, ‘ethnic cleansing in Gaza.’”

    That was nothing you wouldn’t hear outside of, say, Glenn Greenwald’s Twitter feed, but then it got dark. The student continued, “I’m just confused why this idea has come around considering the fact that not only does their religion not agree with ours but also openly supports the persecution of ours.”

    Judaism doesn’t support the “persecution” of Christians. The religions share half a Bible. Christianity’s savior was a Jew until the Romans murdered him. Here we go again with a foreign-policy critique turning into a disgusting blood libel.

    The audience, trained by groypers to hate Jews since childhood, roared with approval, and J.D. Vance didn’t seem willing to anger his base. “Sometimes Israel has similar interests to the United States and sometimes they don’t,” he said, as though he were talking about Almond Joy and Mounds. But sometimes you feel like a nut, and Vance said there were “significant theological differences” between Judaism and Christianity.

    Instead of adding something like “Israel is our trusted ally and Jews do not control the United States, they are a valued part of America’s rich, diverse tapestry,” Vance said, “What I’m not OK with is any country coming before the interests of American citizens. That’s what we’re going to do… I promise you.”

    And so we come to the central problem. As on the left, there’s a significant number of people on the political right who simply hate the Jews. This week, Tucker Carlson interviewed Nick Fuentes, who went on and on, as he does, about how “organized Jewry” is a threat. Tucker laughed and laughed in front of the roaring river that forms the backdrop to his online life.

    In response, Heritage Foundation President Kevin D. Roberts, who as recently as this year called anti-semitism “evil,” refused to condemn this conversation. “We won’t start canceling our own people… that includes Tucker Carlson, who remains — and always will be — a close friend of the Heritage Foundation.” He also said, “Christians can critique the state of Israel without being antisemitic. And of course anti-semitism should be condemned.”

    It should be condemned, and it often is, usually by Jews who feel the walls closing in around them. My social-media feed yesterday was full of World Series chatter, see-through Sydney Sweeney dress photos and conservative Jews saying that they feel betrayed by their political compatriots. Yesterday was a day you’ll never forget, unless you weren’t paying attention. When the left hates you and the right hates you, all that remains is vigilance. American Jews should get their passports ready. And maybe sign up for some Krav Maga.

  • Charlie Kirk and the fifth great awakening

    Charlie Kirk and the fifth great awakening

    Political Islam is a powerful global force. Wahhabism, the Muslim Brotherhood and Shia theocracy are different yet successful strands of the same impulse to govern according to the will of Allah. 

    Political Christianity, by contrast, has in recent decades, even centuries, taken a back seat when it comes to public affairs. With some exceptions, Christians have broadly interpreted Jesus’s message to “Render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar’s” as an injunction not to muddy the holy pursuit of justice with the worldly pursuit of power. 

    At Charlie Kirk’s memorial yesterday, the world witnessed something different: not just a Christian politics but a political Christianity. Republican party campaigns have long had a strong evangelical dimension. But the Make America Great Again movement is producing something new: a spiritualized politics that is far less apologetic, much more strident and nationalist, and as syncretic as it is militant. 

    It’s a multi-faith army for Jesus, unashamed of its contradictions and adamant in its defense of hybridized conservative values. (For more on this see our latest “Angels & Demons” edition of The Spectator World.) 

    Kirk’s memorial, held in a vast and packed football stadium in Arizona, was a profoundly religious event, and an explicit attempt to proselytize. We saw the President, the Vice President, the Secretary of State, the Secretary of Defense and the Director of National Intelligence all lionize Charlie as a warrior for God. J.D. Vance, a Catholic, called him “a martyr” for the faith. Pete Hegseth, a Protestant veteran, quoted his own pastor saying “the devil overplayed his hand” in killing Kirk. He urged the audience: “arm yourself with truth, with prayer, with unapologetic boldness.” DNI director Tulsi Gabbard, a Hindu, added that the Trump movement should “take shelter in God, to draw strength and fearlessness from the Lord.” Stephen Miller, the Jewish White House Deputy Chief of Staff, talked in faintly pagan terms about how Kirk had been “immortalized” and said “we will prevail over the forces of wickedness.” 

    Tucker Carlson, the Episcopalian media star, compared Kirk’s killing to the crucifixion of Christ. He said he could feel “the Holy Spirit humming like a tuning fork” throughout the stadium. Rob McCoy, Charlie’s co-chair at Turning Point USA, said that Kirk saw “politics as an on-ramp for Jesus’.” Andrew Kolvet, the producer of Charlie Kirk’s show and TPUSA’s comms director, said: “Charlie was a prophet… not the fortune-telling kind but the Biblical kind. He confronted evil and proclaimed the truth.”

    Erika Kirk, the grieving window, delivered the most powerful Christian message of all. She forgave her husband’s murderer. “Charlie wanted to save young men just like him,” she said. “Lost, angry, deceived by the world. Pray for him. Pray for his soul. And pray that God breaks his shackles.”

    The theme which the speakers had clearly agreed upon was “revival” – not revenge. President Trump called it “a great spiritual awakening.”

    Since its founding, America has been convulsed by at least four “great awakenings,” which have bound American faith in God to the nation’s sense of manifest destiny. What we could be seeing now is a Fifth Great Awakening, but one that is more nakedly political, coming as it does from the White House down, and less explicitly Protestant, mixing as it does Catholic messages with the passionate convictions of other faiths. 

    At the very end of the 19th century Pope Leo XIII warned against the “heresy of Americanism,” with its emphasis on individual liberty and embrace of the spirit of the age.  As chance would have it, there is now a new American Pope, also called Leo. How might he respond to this MAGA-spiritual revival? 

    Pope Leo might note that a new religious fervor is beginning to envelop the right in Europe, too. In Britain, a Christian warrior ethos is taking hold on certain parts of the right. It is in some ways in reaction to political Islam in the United Kingdom. In others, it is inspired by the overt Christianity of the Trump movement. We saw crosses and crusader costumes at the “Unite the Kingdom” rally in London the weekend before last. The political Christian revival may have a strong American influence. But it could also be much bigger than just American politics.

  • America pays tribute to Charlie Kirk

    America pays tribute to Charlie Kirk

    In an exhilarating, often exhausting and unprecedented moment in American history, hundreds of thousands of people gathered in an Arizona football stadium on Sunday afternoon to honor slain conservative activist Charlie Kirk. Attendees included dozens of members of Congress, half the Cabinet, President Trump, Vice-President Vance and the former shadow President, Elon Musk.

    They remembered Kirk as a husband, a father, a friend, a true believer in the American way, a devotee of freedom of speech and civil discourse, a lover of classical Greek and Roman philosophy, and, perhaps most significantly, a warrior for the Christian God, belief in whom animated Kirk’s every utterance and every action.

    Kirk’s memorial, or, as many speakers, including Vance, called it, “revival,” was perhaps the most Christian event in American history to take place outside a church setting. Devotional music augmented every minute of the proceedings, with many members of the passionate crowd singing along. In one of the most stunning and beautiful moments of grace in memory, Kirk’s widow, Erika, fought back tears as she said that Kirk wanted “to save young men, just like the one who took his life. I forgive him, I forgive him because it’s what Christ did and it’s what Charlie would do.”

    Erika Kirk’s redemptive words and composure, somewhat muted a few minutes later when President Trump implied he would seek the federal death penalty for Charlie Kirk’s accused killer Tyler Robinson, stood in direct contrast to the cruel, graceless left-wing celebrations that occurred online in the days after Kirk’s death.

    The revival proceedings included a predictably unhinged, vengeful rant by Trump advisor Stephen Miller, a rambling address by Tucker Carlson, combative MAGA thumping from the extremely online Jack Posobiec, and classy remarks from Tulsi Gabbard and a clearly grieving Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. As always, though, President Trump’s appearance, which came at nearly the five-hour mark of a very long ceremony, was the highlight.

    Trump appeared on stage surrounded by sparklers as an aged Lee Greenwood, facing him like a lover in a duet, crooned “I’m Proud To Be An American.” The President, never one to stay entirely on message, talked about sending federal troops into Chicago, about declaring war on Antifa, and called Jimmy Kimmel an “anchor with no talent and low ratings.” He also reiterated that he was going to be awarding Kirk a posthumous Presidential Medal of Freedom and called the assassination “an assault on our most sacred God-given liberties and God-given rights. The gun was pointed at him but the bullet was aimed at all of us…The assassin failed in this quest because Charlie’s message has not been silenced, and now is bigger and better and stronger than ever before.”

    It was a vintage Trump performance with something for everyone, unless you are a “radical left lunatic.” On political violence and freedom of speech, he had this to say: “No side has a monopoly on disturbed or misguided people, but there’s one part of our political community which believes they have a monopoly on truth…If speech is violence, then some are bound to conclude that violence is justified to stop speech.”

    When it came to religion, Trump said, “We have to bring back religion to America because without borders, law and order and religion you really don’t have a country anymore.” But though Trump invoked God a number of times, and expressed admiration for the Christian faith of the Kirk family, his presentation was not overtly religious. In fact, at one point he said Kirk “did not hate his opponents, he wanted the best for them. That’s where I disagree with Charlie. I hate my opponents and I don’t want what’s best for them. I’m sorry, I am sorry Erika.” That was very non-Christian of Trump, but you cannot say the same thing for the Kirk revival as a whole.

    It’s one thing if Charlie Kirk’s pastor, coworkers, friends, widow, or Benny Johnson say things like “Charlie looked at politics as an onramp to Jesus” or “Charlie was a prophet…not the fortunetelling kind, but the Biblical kind.” It’s another when the Secretary of State publicly preaches the Gospel truth about Christ’s resurrection in an event broadcast to countless millions around the world, as Marco Rubio did. JD Vance called Kirk a “martyr for the Christian faith”, as did many other speakers. He said, “The assassin expected us to have a funeral but instead we have had a revival in the celebration of Charlie Kirk and his Lord Jesus Christ.”

    Vance also said, “Charlie brought the truth that Jesus Christ was the King of Kings and all things flowed from that,” while also calling Kirk a lover of history, defender of the West, and the foremost practitioner of the Socratic method. “I have talked more about Jesus Christ the past two weeks than I have my entire time in public life,” Vance said.

    He’s not the only one. This is the most Christian moment in America that I can recall, and I’ve been alive since the Nixon Presidency. On the one hand, Charlie Kirk was a devoted Christian, and is obviously a hugely influential figure in modern American political history; you can’t ignore the reality. And when you look at the shining, optimistic faces in the arena, or at the many spontaneous prayer gatherings that have sprung up since his murder, it’s far preferable to the bitter, angry, mendacious violent woke race Communism or whatever it is that modern progressives are offering. Kirk offered a message of faith, family, patriotism, and love, and a soul-sick nation, thirsty for optimism, responded.

    On the other hand, some of us will never accept Jesus Christ as our personal savior. I’m Jewish, so that’s right out for me, and there are other religious and non-religious people who sit in the same kettle. Not every spiritual journey ends with “He Is Risen.”

    The Kirk assassination is going to have deep reverberations throughout American history for a generation, and possibly beyond. I just hope that free and open dialogue and turning the other cheek end up being part of those reverberations.

  • J.D. Vance presents The Charlie Kirk Show

    J.D. Vance presents The Charlie Kirk Show

    Charlie Kirk’s assassination was a shock to the conservative movement and a tragedy for those who knew him personally. For Vice President J.D. Vance, Kirk wasn’t just another conservative influencer – he was a close friend, a mentor and an ally who helped introduce him to donors and gave him a platform when he was still an unknown Senate candidate. Hosting The Charlie Kirk Show from the White House was, in many ways, a natural act of loyalty. It was also a rare moment of vulnerability from a politician often cast as calculating: a man honoring his fallen friend.

    But even in mourning, there is a temptation in politics that must be resisted – the temptation to turn personal loss into partisan ammunition. And that’s where Vance’s tribute stepped onto shakier ground.

    During the broadcast, Vance vowed to “go after” left-wing NGOs he accused of “fomenting and facilitating violence.” One of his guests, former Trump advisor Stephen Miller, sharpened the point, warning against “unfocused anger” while urging conservatives to direct “righteous anger” against political enemies. The message was unmistakable: Kirk’s death would not only be remembered – it would be weaponized.

    This is the wrong lesson to draw from such a brutal killing.

    No one should minimize the rage conservatives feel at losing a friend and ally to political violence. But the danger lies in making Kirk’s death the justification for sweeping crackdowns on vaguely defined “left-wing NGOs” or in portraying one side of the political spectrum as inherently violent. Such rhetoric may rally the base, but it also feeds the very cycle of polarization that makes political violence more likely, not less.

    The truth is uncomfortable for both sides: violence is not the monopoly of the left or the right. The left can point to January 6. The right can point to last week’s shooting in Utah. Neither side escapes blame. If conservatives want to honor Charlie Kirk honestly, we must be willing to admit that political violence is an American problem before it is a partisan one.

    That doesn’t mean ignoring ideology. Kirk’s own career was built on identifying ideological excess – especially in higher education – and rallying young conservatives to push back. But it does mean that in the aftermath of his assassination, our first instinct should not be to widen the political battlefield. Vance’s vow to “go after” NGOs raises more questions than it answers. Who decides what qualifies as fomenting violence? Will this drag in any left-leaning nonprofit that criticizes the administration or stages protests? And do conservatives really want to hand the precedent of government crackdowns on nonprofits to future Democratic administrations?

    This is the irony: in trying to honor Kirk, we risk betraying one of the principles he himself championed – free speech. Charlie Kirk was combative, sometimes divisive, but he thrived in the realm of debate. His strategy was not to silence his opponents, but to expose them, ridicule them, and out-organize them. For those who often disagreed with his methods, it’s important to note that Kirk himself built his career not by calling for government crackdowns, but by confronting his opponents directly. His approach was consistent: he thrived in the arena of debate, not in silencing dissent.

    If the conservative movement takes Kirk’s death as a license to wield the state against its enemies, it will be pursuing power in a way that Kirk himself never had. Worse, it will entrench the very culture of “us versus them” politics that makes tragedies like this more likely.

    The better path is harder but more worthy of Kirk’s legacy: to channel grief into discipline, not escalation. That means recommitting to building institutions that last, training the next generation of leaders and modeling the resilience that Kirk himself embodied. It means condemning political violence no matter who the target is, while refusing to let the other side dictate our terms of debate. And it means holding our leaders accountable when they risk turning mourning into opportunism.

    To be clear: J.D. Vance’s tribute was not malicious. It was heartfelt, and it reflected real pain. But as conservatives, we must remember that personal grief does not excuse political overreach. The state should not become an instrument of vengeance. The conservative movement should not confuse righteous anger with unchecked power.

    Charlie Kirk’s assassination is a wake-up call. It reminds us of the fragility of civil discourse and the dangers of living in a country where political opponents are increasingly seen as enemies to be destroyed rather than fellow citizens to be debated. If conservatives want to carry Kirk’s torch forward, we must not repeat that mistake.

    Let the tribute stand as a reminder of his energy, his influence, and his drive. Honoring his life doesn’t require uncritical agreement with his politics. It requires recognizing the movement he built and refusing to let his death be used as justification for more division. But let us also reject the instinct to weaponize his death. That is how we honor his legacy – not by escalating division, but by proving that even in tragedy, our movement can choose principle over vengeance.

  • Britain’s foreign secretary faces fine for fishing without a license

    What people on the other side of the pond call “Brand Britain” has taken something of a knock in recent years – especially in the United States, which the British often still view as an errant son. With unnerving speed Britain’s reputation has collapsed stateside, especially among the political right, from the country of Brideshead Revisited to a grotty Airstrip One. The symbol of the new Britain in the eyes of many Americans are the ubiquitous licenses (or, in the argot of a London copper, “loicenses”) that citizens seem to need for everything – including, most notoriously, owning a TV.

    Now even the Foreign Secretary has been caught without a loicense. On Friday David Lammy went fishing with the now-Vice President J.D. Vance, who is here for an extended visit, on the grounds of Chevening – the grace-and-favor country house granted to the incumbent Foreign Secretary. But there was a snag. It turns out that Mr. Lammy did not have a rod license – and fishing without one can incur a fine of up to £2,500 ($3,400). Not ideal for a country that’s looking to burnish its libertarian bona fides.

    Earlier this week, the State Department warned that the human rights situation in the UK had “worsened” amid some heavy-handed enforcement of the country’s laws on so-called hate speech. And last year the then-Senator J.D. Vance joked that the UK was the “first Islamist country with nuclear weapons.”

    British Prime Minister Keir Starmer has been keen to curry favor with the 47th President and so is determined to shake off the litigious image. He’s been saying all sorts of Whig, Macaulay-ite things about our national story that went out of style in the UK long ago. Magna Carta, the “Mother of Parliaments,” all the rest of it. All calculated to soothe the feelings of a stately fellow of the Heritage Foundation, for whom England is still the birthplace of constitutional government. “We have had free speech for a long time so, er, we’re very proud of that,” Starmer told reporters during Trump’s visit to Scotland last month.

    But this stratagem may have just hit a bump. Lammy has now referred himself to the Environment Agency, an independent watchdog that handles such matters. An act of nobility on a level with the heroes of the English Civil War, to be sure.

  • Essex-boy Elegy: J.D. Vance meets the Bosh man

    Vice President Vance is currently receiving visitors at an 18th-century Georgian manor in the Cotswolds, an implausibly quaint patch of the English countryside. Petitioners so far have included James Orr, the Cambridge academic and right-wing activist, Robert Jenrick, likely the next leader of Britain’s Tories, and Nigel Farage, likely the next UK Prime Minister.

    Also on the list was one Thomas Skinner, a gregarious wide boy from East London turned e-celebrity turned patriotic influencer. After a stint as a pillow and mattress merchant Skinner, 34, found fame as a contestant on the 15th series of the British version of The Apprentice. In 2022 he began posting videos on social media of himself gobbling down steaming platters of traditional English fare – pie, mash, bacon, beans, sausage, chips (fries), fried eggs, fried bread, black pudding – while extolling the virtues of family and hard work. Each homily would end with Skinner’s trademark catchphrase: “BOSH.”

    Skinner’s politics began to emerge. “I love Trump, I think he is brilliant, that’s my opinion. I think it’s good he is back in charge, it will be good for the UK economy,” he said in late 2024. Mayor Sadiq Khan had “ruined” London and militant eco-protesters were “ruining people’s lives.” Orr, who has emerged as a leading theorist of a newly-galvanized British right, took notice. Had they finally found their own Trump – or at the very least their own Archie Bunker? In June Skinner delivered a speech at Now and England, a conference organized by Orr, where he spoke of “kids being taught to be ashamed of their own flag.” The Vice President watched.

    Now the two netizens meet at last. Vance, a longtime online admirer, invited Skinner over for beers and a barbecue. Skinner relayed his experience with his usual brio:

    When the Vice President of the USA invites ya for a BBQ a beers, you say yes. Unreal night with JD and his friends n family. He was a proper gent. Lots of laughs and some fantastic food. A brilliant night, one to tell the grand kids about mate. Bosh❤️

    Here is a pic of Me and Vice President @JDVance towards the end of the night after a few beers 🍻 I’m overdressed in my suit, but when the VP invites you to a BBQ, you don’t risk turning up in shorts an flip-flops 😂 Cracking night in the beautiful English countryside with JD, his friends and family. Once in a lifetime. Bosh ❤️🇬🇧🇺🇸

    The encounter is another sign of the chaotic merger that’s being carried out between politics and the online world. Is Skinner a meme, or a politician? It’s increasingly difficult to disentangle the two.

  • Trump starts Christmas now

    Trump starts Christmas now

    There’s no small irony in the fact that Texas Democratic state legislators, fleeing a congressional redistricting attempt by Texas’s Republican majority, have sought shelter in Illinois. They’re acting like political refugees in what is, in fact, the most gerrymandered state in the country.

    Look at Illinois District 13, which snakes up from the Missouri border nearly to the gates of Indiana, bisecting the state (and District 15) like Illinois’s small intestine. Chicago is a very populous city, but the state has carved up its Congressional districts like a turducken, giving us as many (D-Chicagos) as humanly possible.

    The Illinois Democratic machine has had an outsized influence on American politics, much less Illinois politics, for decades. Its favorite son, Barack Obama, even became president. Now that Texas is serving up a gerrymandering machine that’s just as powerful, and just as corrupt, Illinois is offering asylum. That’s rich.

    Cockburn has been to both states. They both offer occasional moments of grace punctuated by millions of acres of cow manure. May they gerrymander each other out of existence and let a non-corrupt state devoted to direct democracy, wherever that may exist, take control of Congress.

    With Trump, Christmas starts now

    It’s August, which means that Christmas is just around the corner. While Cockburn hangs around the house drinking spritzes and swatting mosquitos on the patio, the White House has announced it’s time to receive applications to help with Christmas decorations and to perform at holiday open houses. ’Tis the season, I guess! To the administration’s credit, they didn’t announce they’re officially renaming the holiday The First Lady Melania Trump Christmas Spectacular.

    While countless school choirs and dance teams will certainly bring the jolly, Cockburn would like to see various administration figures appear as part of the festivities. Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard can finally reveal who was behind the cover-up of the Santa Files (not David Sedaris’s, the real ones). Pete Hegseth can dress up as Santa and send selfies to the group chat. We look forward to Barron Trump’s Christmas Crypto Bash. Most prominently, J.D. Vance can fulfill his destiny by dressing as Buddy the Elf and proclaiming “Santa? I know him!!!” – a nice summary of his relationship with President Trump.

    On our radar

    UP ON THE ROOFTOP Joined by several men in suits this morning, President Trump took questions from the roof of the White House. Apparently, he was surveying the building for his recently announced $200 million ballroom.

    RUSSIA RUSSIA RUSSIA Pam Bondi directed the DoJ to launch a grand jury investigation into allegations that the Obama administration manufactured intelligence about 2016 election interference.

    EPSTEIN UPDATE Ghislaine Maxwell has been transferred to a minimum security prison in Bryan, Texas. Meanwhile, Bill and Hillary Clinton are set to be deposed by the House Oversight Committee this October for their connection to Epstein.

    Going Postal

    News broke this week (in the New York Post, appropriately enough), that the paper is soon to begin publishing a California edition, called the California Post. These happy tidings are almost enough to make Cockburn want to move back to California, where he spent some very happy, idle months at the Chateau Marmont in the 80s, and also the 90s.

    Regardless, this is great news for California’s bleak, bland, hyper-woke media offerings, punctuated only by the occasional conservative opposition blog, Adam Carolla X account or grouchy late-night AM radio hosts. An active Page Six alone will help burst the Hollywood PR bubble, and Cockburn relishes the idea of holding Gavin Newsom and Karen Bass’s feet to the fire on any number of issues. Newspapers aren’t, in fact, dead. They’re just not giving people something that they want to read. And as much as they hate to admit it, everyone wants to read the Post.