Boris Johnson praises Donald Trump's tweets for 'engaging people' | Politics
Boris Johnson has suggested he wishes he could tweet like Donald Trump, and praised the way the US president has drawn people into politics.
In an interview with BBC Radio 4âs Today programme, the foreign secretary intimated he was envious of the freedom with which Trump expressed his views on Twitter, despite the intense criticism the president has faced over his use of the network.
He said: âDonald Trumpâs approach to politics has been something that has gripped the imagination of people around the world. He has engaged people in politics in a way that we havenât seen for a long time, with his tweets and all the rest of it.
âI certainly wouldnât be allowed to tweet in the way that he does, much as I might like to. Iâm seeing my Foreign Office minders looking extremely apprehensive here.â
The timing of Johnsonâs remarks might explain why his aides were looking so anxious. Criticism of Trumpâs use of Twitter has reached new intensity in the past week after he launched a crude attack on the TV host Mika Brzezinski, whom he described as âbleeding badlyâ from a facelift.
Johnsonâs blond hair and flexibility with the truth have led to comparisons with the US president. But if he wants to emulate Trumpâs direct style on Twitter he may have to try harder. His bland tweets suggest Foreign Office mandarins are firmly in control and may have a hand in writing them.
A day after Trump tweeted a video of himself wrestling CNN to the ground, Johnson was tweeting about how great it was to meet up with his Iraqi counterpart.
Trump likes to use capital letters to shout out his key messages, as he did when he claimed his use of Twitter was âMODERN DAY PRESIDENTIALâ.
Johnson rarely strays into caps-lock mode, except to make lame puns.
And while Johnson is known for colourful turns of phrase, such as when he called Jeremy Corbyn a âmutton-headed old mugwumpâ, his tweets sometimes read like they are from someone doing a poor impression of the foreign secretary.
With others there is no disguising the hand of officialdom.
US officials must wish that they could rein in Trumpâs offensive outbursts.
In his interview, Johnson claimed the UK had been a restraining influence on Trump. He said: âWe in the UK do not agree, by any means, with everything that Washington currently says. It is very important to understand that when Theresa May goes to meet the president today, as she will in Hamburg ⦠our role is to represent our own point of view.
âWhether itâs on Nato, climate change, the Iran nuclear accord, it is the UK that is actually helping, we think, to mitigate, to get some of those American attitudes and policies that are currently coming out of the White House into a better place. If you look at the last 12 months or so there has been a great deal of progress.â
Johnsonâs apparent envy of Trumpâs candour overshadowed his loyal remarks about the prime minister later in the interview and his attempts to row back on his call for the public sector pay cap to be lifted.
This week a senior government source told the Guardian Johnson was adding to cabinet appeals for the 1% ceiling on wage rises to be lifted. But in his BBC interview Johnson evaded the question of whether the cap should be lifted.
He said: âWhat I think, and I know my friend the chancellor thinks, is there has got to be a balance in all this. You canât endlessly borrow, you canât endlessly spend.
âThe country has done well to cut the deficit by three-quarters in the way that we have and that leads to huge economic benefits ⦠It is very, very important that you manage your economy sensibly and donât just go for a crazy Corbynite splurge.â
Pressed on the issue, he said: âAs Philip Hammond has also said ⦠we recognise that people are weary of restraint. We recognise that when the public sector pay review bodies report we will obviously be wanting to look at their thinking very carefully.
âEvery sensible government wants to make sure that people have a well-paid secure job, that is what we want to achieve, but we have got to achieve that in a way that is fiscally sensible and responsible.â
Asked about his leadership ambitions, Johnson said there was âno vacancyâ and he complimented May on the way she had recovered since the election.
He said: âThere was a Conservative party event last night. Theresa May gave a fantastic speech. I was watching her and thinking what unbelievable grace and steel she has shown over the last few weeks.
âThe thing did not frankly look too brilliant on the morning of 9 June. It looked very difficult. She has put things back together, she has got the show on road, she is delivering a stable government as she said she would, and we are getting on with it.â
Johnson said a Tory leadership race was âthe last thing people wantâ, adding: âWhat they want to see is a long period of stability and calm and progress for the British people that will enable us to start to deliver.â
On North Korea, Johnson urged China to do more to intervene after Pyongyangâs successful intercontinental ballistic missile test. He said: âWhat the North Koreans are doing is reckless, itâs indefensible, itâs in defiance of repeated UN resolutions, it is illegal and itâs very important that the world stands together against what they are doing.
âThe country with the most direct economic relationship with North Korea, that is China, has got to continue to put on the pressure. We are seeing some real changes in Beijingâs attitude to North Korea and that has got to go further.â
The foreign secretary also said the UK was trying to âdial things downâ in the feud between Saudi Arabia and Qatar.
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