The special relationship just got a little more awkward. Donald Trump, the Republican nominee, walked out of a pre-recorded NBC News interview yesterday, clashing with correspondent Kristen Welker over his refusal to accept the 2020 election result. The move, which left producers scrambling, has sent a jolt through foreign policy circles in London. Whitehall sources are watching the spectacle with a mixture of horror and resignation. One former senior diplomat told me: 'It confirms our worst fears about a second Trump term. The man cannot accept a democratic verdict. That is a problem for all of us.'
The meltdown happened during a segment on election integrity. When Welker pressed Trump on his repeated false claims of a stolen election, he snapped: 'Are you a lawyer? You’re not a lawyer. You’re a lightweight.' He then ripped off his microphone and left the studio. Aides later claimed the interview had been 'rigged' against him. This is vintage Trump: a volcanic eruption at the first sign of scrutiny. But the implications for UK national security are profound.
Downing Street has so far kept its counsel, but the mood is grim. Senior civil servants in the Foreign Office have already begun contingency planning for a Trump victory in November. The fear is that a president who sees the election system as fraudulent will be even less constrained in his foreign policy decisions. 'We already had to navigate his unpredictability on trade and NATO,' one Whitehall insider said. 'Now imagine a version of him who feels personally vindicated in conspiracy theories. It’s a nightmare.'
The timing could not be worse. The UK is deep in a general election campaign, with Keir Starmer’s Labour party leading in the polls. Starmer has gone to great lengths to build a relationship with the White House, carefully avoiding criticism of Joe Biden while signalling he would work with any US president. But the Trump incident is a stark reminder that a Starmer premiership could face its first major foreign policy test before the ink is dry on his cabinet appointments. 'If Trump is back, Starmer will have to hit the ground running,' a former Number 10 adviser said. 'He can’t afford to be seen as weak on the special relationship.'
The reaction from Conservative backbenchers has been a study in cognitive dissonance. On one hand, many Tories admire Trump’s brashness and his attacks on the 'liberal elite'. On the other, they are acutely aware of the damage a Trump presidency could do to Britain’s standing in the world. One Tory MP, who has been critical of Trump, said: 'We cannot hitch our star to a man who threatens to delegitimise democratic elections. It makes us look like we share his circus.'
The leak of the exchange has already been weaponised by Labour. Shadow Foreign Secretary David Lammy tweeted: 'This is what chaos looks like on the world stage. The UK cannot afford a leader who makes excuses for such behaviour.' It is a clear swipe at the Conservatives’ refusal to openly criticise Trump. But the calculation in Tory ranks is more nuanced. They need Trump’s base to align with their own on issues like Brexit and sovereignty. They just don’t want to say it out loud.
Meanwhile, the political establishment in Europe is watching with alarm. A senior EU diplomat told me: 'If Trump returns, the transatlantic alliance is over. He will pull out of NATO, impose tariffs, and make our economies his battleground.' The UK, caught between Washington and Brussels, will face an impossible choice. 'We will have to decide whether we are an offshore outpost of the United States or a European power with our own interests,' the diplomat added.
The immediate fallout is likely to be more tonal than substantive. But the incident has punctured any remaining hope of a normalised Trump candidacy. For UK allies, it is a grim preview of what lies ahead. As one weary mandarin put it: 'Buckle up. The next five years are going to be a rollercoaster.'










