(Bloomberg) — With Liz Truss as the new UK prime minister, the “special relationship” with the US is on course for redefinition with a conservative leader that is much more of a hard-liner than her predecessor.
(Bloomberg) — With Liz Truss as the new UK prime minister, the “special relationship” with the US is on course for redefinition with a conservative leader that is much more of a hard-liner than her predecessor.
President Joe Biden will speak to his counterpart on Tuesday at 3:30 p.m.
Washington time, a conversation that will set the tone for the future working relationship of two allies that have been historically close but do not always see eye to eye.
His spokeswoman nodded to potential friction between Biden, a Democrat, and Truss, a Conservative who underwent a political transformation and went from being anti-Brexit to one of its most dedicated cheerleaders.
“He has been clear about his continued interest in Northern Ireland,” White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said Tuesday.
“Our priority remains protecting the gains of the Belfast Agreement and preserving peace, stability and prosperity for the people of Northern Ireland.”
Biden was critical of the UK departing the European Union and given his roots felt particular concern about how a UK government could undermine the 1998 Good Friday Agreement, which drew a line under three decades of violence in the region.
The worry is whether Truss would tear up key parts of the Brexit deal that keeps Northern Ireland in the bloc’s single market for goods to avoid imposing a hard border on the island of Ireland.
The intervention comes at another tricky juncture for UK-EU relations as the deadline approaches for Truss’s government to respond to reactive legal proceedings launched by Brussels accusing the UK of four infringements to the Northern Ireland treaty.
The deadline for the response is Sept. 15.
Truss is seeking to meet Biden when she makes her international debut at the United Nations General Assembly later in September, according to a person familiar with her thinking.
Even so, her domestic in-tray is laden with an announcement on energy this week and tax plans next, leaving her less bandwidth for pursuing trade deals with a reluctant Biden. The US declined comment.
Most pointedly, Truss is less keen on the “special relationship,” a term fetishized by the Tory press to describe the personal affinity between Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher in the 1980s.
Last year, on the fringes of the annual Tory party conference, she said she sees the relationship with the US as “special but not exclusive,” comparing the jostling of nations positioning to be close to the US as a “beauty contest.”
The UK, she told the audience, shouldn’t be “worried like some teenage girl at a party if we’re not considered to be good enough.
I don’t I just don’t see it like that.”
(Update in paragraph 7 on plans to attend UN General Assembly)
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