Former U.S. President Donald Trump’s resounding victory in Tuesday’s election
prompted a wave of congratulatory messages from top global politicians —
including many who have previously voiced fierce criticism of the Republican
figurehead.
At least one former leader has already scrubbed their social media of remarks
critical about the president-elect. Australia’s ambassador to the U.S., former
Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, deleted a tweet from 2020 labeling Trump “the most
destructive president in history.”
The post was removed “out of respect for the office of President of the United
States,” Rudd said in a statement.
Given that Trump has promised to use his second term to settle old scores and go
after his enemies, these are some of the politicians who may have cause to worry
about his impending return to the White House.
David Lammy
Then: “Trump is not only a woman-hating, neo-Nazi-sympathising sociopath,”
British Foreign Secretary David Lammy wrote in 2018, when he was a backbench MP,
in an article for Time magazine. “He is also a profound threat to the
international order that has been the foundation of Western progress for so
long.”
Lammy also referred to Trump as a “tyrant in a toupee” in the blistering op-ed.
And a year earlier, he wrote on social media that the Republican was “a racist
KKK and Nazi sympathiser.”
Tory leader Kemi Badenoch this week urged Prime Minister Keir Starmer to
apologize for Lammy’s comments following Trump’s reelection, a call which
Starmer brushed off.
Now: Lammy struck a decidedly more conciliatory tone on Wednesday,
congratulating Trump on his win and praising the “special relationship” between
the U.K. and U.S.
“We look forward to working with you and JD Vance in the years ahead,” he added.
Ursula von der Leyen
Then: European Commission President Von der Leyen said in 2021 she was “aghast”
and “deeply concerned” by remarks Trump made in January 2017 calling NATO
“obsolete.”
She hit out at the Republican at an award ceremony to honor former U.S. Defense
Secretary James Mattis, who served under Trump from 2017 until the end of 2018,
when he resigned in protest at Trump’s decision to pull U.S. troops out of
Syria.
Ursula Von der Leyen also criticized Trump in the same speech over his threat to
deploy American troops to quell demonstrations in summer 2020. | Johannes
Simon/Getty Images
Von der Leyen also criticized Trump in the same speech over his threat to deploy
American troops to quell demonstrations in summer 2020 following the murder of
George Floyd by a police officer.
Praising Mattis for speaking out against Trump, the Commission chief said: “He
spoke out unambiguously to condemn acts that he saw as divisive and contrary to
American values.”
Now: Von der Leyen posted a statement on social media “warmly” congratulating
Trump on Wednesday and stressing the “true partnership between our people,
uniting 800 million citizens.”
Donald Tusk
Then: Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk has repeatedly attacked Trump over the
years, rarely pulling his punches.
“Looking at the latest decisions of Trump, someone could even think: With
friends like that, who needs enemies?” Tusk said in 2018, when he was European
Council president, in response to the U.S. pulling out of the Iran nuclear
accord.
He delivered a rhetorical beatdown of Trump at the United Nations in 2019 after
the American president gave a speech endorsing nationalism and patriotism.
“I do not agree with this opinion,” Tusk said. “It is false and dangerous, even
if it has many followers and powerful propagators.”
He also mocked Trump over his attempt to downplay the dangers of the Covid-19
pandemic and mounted a spirited defense of NATO after the Republican leader
suggested that he would encourage Russian President Vladimir Putin to attack any
member of the military alliance that did not meet its spending targets.
“Looking at the latest decisions of Trump, someone could even think: With
friends like that, who needs enemies?” Donald Tusk said in 2018. | Ferenc
Isza/AFP via Getty Images
Former Polish Defense Minister Mariusz Błaszczak, from the rival Law and Justice
party, went so far as to call on Tusk to resign to preserve good ties between
Warsaw and Washington.
Now: Congratulating Trump, Tusk wrote Wednesday that he would “look forward to
our cooperation for the good of the American and Polish nations.”
Emmanuel Macron
Then: French President Emmanuel Macron’s relationship with Trump during his
first term was often thorny.
In 2018, Macron used a speech at the U.N. to decry a “certain nationalism which
we’re seeing today, brandishing sovereignty as a way of attacking others” in a
thinly veiled allusion to Trump. He also slammed “bilateral agreements” and “new
protectionisms” in a jab at Trump’s trade policies.
A year later, Trump called Macron “very nasty” and “insulting” after the French
leader described NATO as “brain dead.”
Donald Trump called Emmanuel Macron “very nasty” and “insulting” after the
French leader described NATO as “brain dead.” | Ludovic Marin/AFP via Getty
Images
Now: Perhaps it was unsurprising that Macron was among the first leaders to rush
to congratulate Trump on Wednesday, with the French president writing on social
media that he was “ready to work together” with Trump as they did during his
first term.
John Swinney
Then: Scotland’s first minister last week endorsed Kamala Harris over Trump,
joking that he did not support Trump because the Republican was “opposed to
Scottish independence.”
His comments triggered a statement from Trump’s team calling Swinney’s remarks
an “insult to the massive investment in Scotland made by the Trump family.”
Now: “Congratulations to President-elect Trump on his election. Scotland and the
USA share many social, cultural and economic links,” Swinney wrote on social
media Wednesday.
“In that relationship, we will stand fast in support of our values of fairness,
democracy and equality — ideals that America was built upon,” he added
pointedly.