UK Prime Minister, Keir Starmer, has continued to face global criticism over his decision to commission 100 “less busy” Labour Party members as influencers for Kamala Harris.
These 100 Labour Party members who volunteered to fly to the US, and campaign against Donald Trump for fourteen days, did so totally out of their pockets, PM Starmer claimed.
Under US law, however, foreign nationals caught meddling in election campaigns and backed by full or partial sponsorship from their home countries will face election interference charges.
Starmer says the UK has done none of such and his delegates will be assisted to housing by “kind Americans”. But the verdict is left to the US Federal Election Commission (FEC) as it opens investigations on foreign interference filed by Former US President and leading Republican Presidential Candidate, Donald Trump.
From cutting winter elderly fuel payments to fanning the embers of a nuclear war with Russia, Starmer’s Labour government is already shaping up to be an odious failure barely six months into power. The party whose July victory at the polls piggybacked off Conservatives internal crisis, has seen itself tethering shamelessly to the disastrous US Democrat government for foreign policy guidance amidst mass local censorship, dwindling foreign investment, and threatening inflation. Despite possessing 0.03% of the Kremlin’s nuclear capacity, Starmer and his foreign secretary, David Lamy, have repeatedly barked the loudest against Russia with hopes set on NATO and the US.
On the contrary, its relationship with Israel continues to deteriorate with Starmer frustrating Israel’s anti-terrorism campaign to placate Labour party’s influential pro-Hamas base. The latest being the suspension of over 30 arms sale licenses to Israel last month.
With a long list of failures lined along a greedy appetite for gluttony, gain, and generous gestures, Starmer is set to ruin what’s left of the UK’s post-Brexit reputation. This latest open alignment with the Democrat party stands against the wishes of millions of Britons and risks worsening the relationship with the incoming White House should Donald Trump win in November.