Dear John,
Here in the UK it may have been the
week of a spring bank holiday, Parliamentary recess, reading week, and
half-term holiday, but someone clearly forgot to tell the news gods.
The last few days saw big speeches from - you guessed it - Reform UK
leader Nigel Farage, followed by Prime Minister Keir Starmer. Major
trade news also emerged from the US as a shock New York federal trade
court ruling blocked the majority of President Donald Trump’s sweeping
global trade tariffs, before an appeals court temporarily halted the
order, with all the implications for world economic stability you
might expect.
Here to (attempt) to make sense of it all is your Weekend Wire, from Best for
Britain.
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Notable Substacker Dominic Cummings
emerged, blinking into the light, this week to become one of the last
people in the country to predict Kemi Badenoch might at some point be
out of a job. The former Boris Johnson aide, perhaps best known for
his lockdown-busting, eyesight-testing, all-round-bizarre Barnard
Castle trip, or his refusal to use an iron, told Sky News the Conservative leader “is going to go,
probably this year”. People are “already organising to get rid of her,
and I think that that will work. If it doesn’t work this year, it will
definitely happen after next May”, he reckoned, in a not-vague-at-all
forecast.
While in, what we in the biz call,
a ‘wide-ranging’ (code:
tried and failed to keep them on topic) interview, Cummings insisted the Tory
Party “might be dead” and had possibly “crossed the event horizon” -
and that he believed Reform - who he called a “a vehicle for people to
say ‘we despise you’” - could win up to 150 seats at the next election
with “Nigel and an iPhone”. Could the eternal disruptor possibly be
interested in another stint in a top No10 job? Who can say…
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One highlight of this week for Best
for Britain was our chief executive Naomi Smith’s appearance on
LBC’s Cross Question panel show with Iain Dale, which saw her
make a passionate - and common sense - case for Starmer and Ursula von
der Leyen to get their heads together, deliver on the promises of the
UK-EU summit and secure that much-needed growth.
For anyone who missed it, we tuned
in to ensure you had all the highlights [watch below], and you can
catch the episode in full here.
You can also read Naomi’s views on
why this matters so much in more detail in her opinion piece for Left Food
Forward.
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Reform UK leader Nigel Farage
delivered a speech on Tuesday packed with uncosted and divisive
policies, which resulted in the National Liberal Club having to write to its
members after he used Royal
Horseguards Hotel - also home to the club - as a venue. The twice-married Clacton MP also unveiled several
pro-natalist policies, including stating his belief that introducing a
“transferable tax allowance between married people is the right thing
to do”.
Economists at the Institute for
Fiscal Studies (IFS) were quick to highlight the proposals amounted to
huge tax cuts funded by vast public spending cuts, with deputy director Helen Miller
warning the cost of the
promise to increase the income tax personal allowance to £20,000 a
year “could easily be in the range of £50 to £80 billion a year”. She
also stressed that Reform “is proposing a very different vision for
the role of government… [of] much lower taxes, paid for with large,
unspecified cuts to public services… far beyond a crackdown on
waste”.
Farage challenged the Prime
Minister to a debate in a “working man’s club, somewhere in the red
wall”, despite the BBC reporting last year that some three quarters of the venues have
closed over the past 50 years. He reiterated Reform’s ‘new’ slogan -
‘family, community, country’ - and if that happens to sound familiar,
you’re right. It’s the very same form of words that one Lord David
Cameron was criticised for appearing to
echo French fascist leader
Marshall Petain in 2009.
Starmer opted to hit back on
Wednesday with a speech of his own at a glass factory in St Helens,
Merseyside. The Prime Minister warned Farage’s plans to spend
“billions upon billions upon billions… of pounds, in an unfunded way”
was an “exact repeat of what Liz Truss did”.
He asked: “Can you trust him with
your future? Can you trust him with your jobs… your mortgages, your
pensions, your bills? And he gave the answer on Tuesday. A resounding
no.”.
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‘You are gold
(gold)’
Alright, well, the
UK’s membership of the European Economic Community (EEC) did not, in
fact, prove completely indestructible. Nonetheless! This week marks
the 50th anniversary, traditionally marked with that most precious of
metals, of the 1975 referendum on our continued participation in the
bloc.
And arguably, that
spirit, of a sense of partnership, collaboration and mutual respect
with our European friends and neighbours, has never felt more
relevant. When it comes to the pro-Europe movement, to misquote
Spandau Ballet, “always believe in your goal”
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Lights,
camera, motion denied! |
If, like for us, Trump’s gameshow
style ‘Liberation Day’ tariffs TV special was just starting to fade
blissfully into the recesses of memory, then fear not. This week it
came roaring back - with a vengeance - after the New York-based
federal Court of International Trade blocked the President from
imposing the bulk of his sweeping global import levies, following
several lawsuits arguing Trump had overstepped his presidential
authority.
Naturally, a day later, after the
White House appealed the decision, a federal appeals court temporarily
halted the order, allowing Trump to continue collecting tariffs under
the emergency powers law - for now. Just another day on the reality TV
style merry-go-round of [checks notes] global
trade policy. Someone get Judge Judy down here…
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On Sunday the people of Poland will
choose their next President in one of the tightest election races of
the decade. At stake is a fundamental decision for the Polish people
as they choose between the liberal pro-European Mayor of Warsaw
Rafał Trzaskowski and the far-right nationalist Karol Nawrocki.
With the President of Poland able
to enact a sizable amount of political influence and drive the
country's legislative agenda, Donald Tusk (the country's Prime
Minister) will be hoping that Trzaskowski prevails. The election will
either give Poland further legitimacy as a ‘big player’ in the EU
alongside France and Germany or consign them to a more troublesome
cohort alongside Hungary and Slovakia.
With opinion polling pre-election
far too close to call, this one will go down to the wire. Look out for
an update from Best for Britain on Monday…
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Now for those of you not
chronically online (Weekend
Wire envies you), you may
have missed Wall Street’s latest acronym, TACO.
But what does TACO mean? Well one
(brave) journalist put it to the 47th President of
the United States earlier this week. Telling the President that TACO
in fact stands for ‘Trump Always Chickens Out’, in reference to the
strong performance of financial markets who now no longer believe his
threats of further tariffs. Cue a bemused, confused and slightly upset
President.
Trump may have called such
suggestions “nasty” - but this isn't the first time The Donald and
Chickens have crossed paths…
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This has been your Weekend Wire
from Best for Britain.
Keep your eyes out next week as we
mark the 50th anniversary of the 1975 EEC referendum. We’ll also be
hosting the next session of the UK Trade and Business Commission
(UKTBC) as our experts digest all the outcomes of the UK-EU reset
summit.
Have a good one.
Jessica Frank-Keyes

Senior Press Officer
Best for Britain
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