82 resultsfor “Trump criticism of UK Prime Minister”
prime minister Mohammad Mossadegh with supporters in 1951. Photograph: AP “If we had not got rid of Mossadegh, Iran today would be a good member of the family of nations, a socialist democratic country,” Sichel
prime minister announced that Octopus Energy, the UK’s largest electricity supplier by market share, had formed a joint venture with China’s PCG Power to trade renewable energy in the Asian country. Access
Trump [agreed to support it](https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2025/oct/20/albanese-at-the-white-house-trump-endorses-aukus-signs-85bn-rare-earths-deal-and-calls-pm-great-leader). But some within Labor, including former prime minister Paul Keating, as well as civil society groups believe [Aukus](https://www.theguardian.com/world/aukus) is not in Australia’s best
Trump returned to the White House in January last year. As a political appointee, critics say the risk of Lord Mandelson's appointment was higher than a career civil servant, so Sir Keir and Number
Trump has also said that the US will also begin destroying the mines he accuses Iran of having laid in the strait. The US president added that "at some point" an agreement on free passage
criticism at the media during his two terms as president, Trump also took a moment to thank the press for their "responsible coverage" of the attack. He also called for people to "resolve our differences
UK government has let the Palestinian people down and failed to make it economically impossible for Israel to continue to act with impunity in the West Bank and Gaza, the Labour chair of the foreign
Trump reportedly telling Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu not to escalate. “I call the shots … he [Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu] doesn’t call the shots,” he told the UK’s Financial Times on Sunday. Tehran
Prime Minister Keir Starmer risked US President Donald Trump’s wrath as he “refuses to let US use UK bases” for strikes on Iran’s infrastructure. And on Sunday, quoting a minister, The Times said
UK, Sept. 17, 2025. **Yui Mok/AP/Pool PA** Yui Mok/AP/Pool PA LONDON—When entertainer Bob Hope serenaded Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip at the White House in [1976,](https://www.fordlibrarymuseum.gov/digital-research-room/topic-guides/queen-elizabeth-ii) it captured a warmer
Trump administration’s “political will and leadership” to stop mass migration and defend national sovereignty. From an American cemetery in Normandy, [Pete Hegseth](https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/pete-hegseth), the defense secretary, suggested that the freedom the allies
UK from five years to 10, a measure which officials say will apply to many already in the country. That is due to come in later this year once the government has completed a consultation
prime minister riled Trump last year by [rejecting Nato’s proposal](https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/jun/19/spain-rejects-nato-plan-for-member-states-to-spend-5-of-gdp-on-defence) for member states to increase their defence spending to 5% of their GDP, saying the idea would “not only be unreasonable
prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, to accede to the US pressure. Her close relationship with Trump and her support for Israel are buckling. Tehran has not expressed a definitive view of the French-British initiative, partly
criticism, into which Trump frequently leans, that the US president behaves more like an unelected head of state than a representative of all peoples. An anti-Trump movement known as the No Kings protest
UK prime minister, Keir Starmer, withstood calls to resign on Tuesday.** Starmer’s position has [been in peril](https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2026/may/12/darren-jones-keir-starmer-future-labour-leader) after a set of damning local election results for his Labour party last week
Prime Minister said he was "not going to walk away," and added: "I'm not going to plunge the country into chaos."  over the war in Iran. Officials in Downing Street will be hoping the royal family’s soft power diplomacy can help heal the rift. During
UK as an ally. He criticised cuts to international aid, which he said had weakened Britain’s influence, and said Starmer was trying to negotiate with Europe from a position of weakness. The former prime
UK’s foundational legal documents, Magna Carta. And he urged “unyielding resolve” in the cause of “Ukraine and her most courageous people” in order to “secure a truly just and lasting peace”. Speaking from