British BulletinBritish Bulletin
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Tech & Science
  • Travel
  • Spotlight
  • More
    • Press Release
What's On

World Cup 2026: Dan Burn says England’s semi-final loss will ‘haunt’ him

16 July 2026

Britons told to take action now to prepare

16 July 2026

Jesy Nelson’s ex Zion Foster breaks silence with new statement after facing backlash for ‘abandoning’ children after split

16 July 2026

Starmer says it’s the ‘end of my political journey’ at his final Prime Minister’s Questions | UK News

16 July 2026

World Cup 2026: England’s loss to Argentina most painful since 1966 – Phil McNulty

16 July 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Web Stories
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
British Bulletin
Subscribe
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Tech & Science
  • Travel
  • Spotlight
  • More
    • Press Release
British BulletinBritish Bulletin
Home » Donald Trump rips into Keir Starmer for appointing Lord Mandelson in latest swipe at PM
Politics

Donald Trump rips into Keir Starmer for appointing Lord Mandelson in latest swipe at PM

By britishbulletin.com21 April 20264 Mins Read
Donald Trump rips into Keir Starmer for appointing Lord Mandelson in latest swipe at PM
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Donald Trump has laid into Sir Keir Starmer over his appointment of Lord Mandelson as ambassador to the US in his latest swipe at the PM.

In a late-night social media post, Mr Trump said: “Prime Minister Keir Starmer of the United Kingdom acknowledged that he ‘exercised wrong judgement’ when he chose his ambassador to Washington.


“I agree, he was a really bad pick.”

“Plenty of time to recover, however,” the President prodded.

The Labour grandee had been sent to DC to help charm the President just before his return to the White House last January.

At the signing of the US-UK trade deal, Lord Mandelson was complimented by Mr Trump for his “beautiful accent” and was given the floor to make remarks to reporters.

He was later reported to have left that meeting with a handwritten note from the President reading: “Peter, Great Job!”

Even with his links to Jeffrey Epstein aside, some in Maga circles had raised eyebrows over Lord Mandelson’s appointment.

Steve Bannon had told GB News he was a “terrible choice” because of his prior remarks about the President.

He said he was left “stunned” by the pick, adding there were “20 other people” he would have chosen ahead of Lord Mandelson.

The then-Labour peer had previously referred to Trump as a “bully”, “reckless”, and a “danger to the world” in comments he later walked back on to Fox News.

Back in the UK, the Prime Minister yesterday insisted No10 had not forced through Lord Mandelson’s appointment as ambassador.

He claimed to MPs he would not have appointed him if he had known the peer had failed his checks and “full due process” was followed throughout.

The House of Commons will subject Sir Keir’s efforts to lay out the facts of the scandal to further scrutiny on Tuesday, as MPs hold an emergency debate on Lord Mandelson’s appointment.

The debate is expected to start at around 12.30pm on Tuesday, shortly after ex-Foreign Office mandarin Sir Olly Robbins provides evidence to MPs.

That comes ahead of the looming release of a new tranche of so-called “Mandelson files”.

Politico revealed yesterday that ministers and officials’ harshest comments about Mr Trump will not be made public in the next document dump to avoid further tearing up the “special relationship” after a series of blows over Iran, Greenland, oil and the Chagos Islands.

Already this year, Mr Trump has publicly lambasted Sir Keir for his refusal to allow offensive US strikes on Iran from UK or joint bases.

He has also branded the Chagos “surrender” deal an “act of great stupidity”, chastened Britain over its stance on a potential American takeover of Greenland, and repeatedly urged Labour to open up the North Sea to oil drilling.

Now, Parliament’s Intelligence and Security Committee will be casting an eye over the files to ensure nothing emerges which could make things worse.

Ministers are said to be keen to avoid a repeat of the 2019 row which saw the then-British ambassador to Washington, Lord Darroch, described the first Trump administration as “inept” and “clumsy” in a leaked diplomatic cables.

His replacement, Dame Karen Pierce, was well-liked by the White House, with the President viewing her as a “respected” and “effective” diplomat, according to reports.

The current British ambassador, Sir Christian Turner, attempted to cool tensions just days ago.

Speaking at an event in Washington during Rachel Reeves’s trip to the States, Sir Christian said now was an “extraordinary moment” for UK-US relations, but joked disagreements were “relative” compared to the American War of Independence.

“250 years ago we had a small disagreement. We were in the midst of a dispute back then,” he said.

“To our credit, we’ve only tried to burn down the White House once since, and what began in that moment of tension has been forged into one of the deepest and closest alliances in history.”

In just six days, King Charles and Queen Camilla will also jet across the Atlantic for a State Visit.

Mr Trump labelled the King a “great gentleman” last week, insisting his strained relationship with the Prime Minister would “not at all” overshadow or impact the monarch’s visit.

Charles is set to play what Palace sources have called a unique diplomatic role in supporting a UK-US partnership that has “survived many presidencies and of course many reigns”.

“So yes, we are close allies, we do disagree on things, but that doesn’t detract from the value that both sides get from this relationship and have done over many decades,” a Foreign Office spokeswoman said as details of the visit were announced.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Keep Reading

Britons told to take action now to prepare

Andy Burnham: Labour MP shut down in fiery clash over his uncontested path to power

The 18 fare dodger hotspots where new £33.4 MILLION tall ticket gates to be installed

Andy Burnham may have to examine the triple lock sooner rather than later, says Jacob Rees-Mogg

Keir Starmer’s final three failures exposed as ousted PM scrambles to rewrite history

Kemi Badenoch warns Andy Burnham ahead of coronation

Rachel Reeves’s ‘eye-watering’ taxes pushing city into ‘clutches of organised crime’ as council accused of ‘utter failure’

Nigel Farage threat: Police praised for taking risk ‘seriously’ after arrest

Lee Anderson tears into Andy Burnham amid plans to replace Rachel Reeves with ‘Shabana Mahmood’: ‘Shuffling the deckchairs!’

Editors Picks

Britons told to take action now to prepare

16 July 2026

Jesy Nelson’s ex Zion Foster breaks silence with new statement after facing backlash for ‘abandoning’ children after split

16 July 2026

Starmer says it’s the ‘end of my political journey’ at his final Prime Minister’s Questions | UK News

16 July 2026

World Cup 2026: England’s loss to Argentina most painful since 1966 – Phil McNulty

16 July 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest Brittan News and Updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News

Andy Burnham: Labour MP shut down in fiery clash over his uncontested path to power

16 July 2026

Pound rises amid relief Ed Miliband ‘won’t become Chancellor’ as Shabana Mahmood emerges as No11 frontrunner

16 July 2026

Jasmine Harman issues heartbroken statement after A Place in the Sun guest dies in Spanish wildfires

16 July 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest TikTok Instagram
© 2026 British Bulletin. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.