Donald Trump has said he is unlikely to have a good relationship with British Prime Minister David Cameron because Cameron cast the presumptive US presidential candidate as “divisive, stupid and wrong” for proposing a temporary ban on Muslims entering the US.
After Trump’s call for a ban on Muslims, Cameron criticized Trump in the British parliament and suggested that Trump would unite Britain against him if he visited.
“It looks like we’re not going to have a very good relationship, who knows,” Trump told Britain’s ITV in an interview aired yesterday when asked how ties would be if he won power in the Nov. 8 presidential election.
“I hope to have a good relationship with him, but it sounds like he’s not willing to address the problem either,” Trump said, although earlier in the interview he said he did not care about the Cameron comments.
The US is Britain’s closest ally and political leaders from both nations often speak of how the nations’ enjoy a special relationship.
Cameron earlier this month refused to retract his “divisive, stupid and wrong” comment, but said that Trump deserved respect for making it through the grueling Republican primary process.
“We have a tremendous problem with radical Islamic terror,” Trump told ITV when asked about the proposed ban on Muslims. “The world is blowing up and it’s not people from Sweden that’s doing the damage OK. So we have a real problem.”
Trump, who had initially wished newly elected London Mayor Sadiq Khan well, said he was offended by Khan’s criticism that he was ignorant about Islam.
“He doesn’t know me, never met me, doesn’t know what I am all about. I think they are very rude statements. Frankly, tell him I will remember those statements. They are very nasty statements,” Trump said. “It is ignorant for him to say that.”
After Khan’s election, Trump had told the New York Times that he could make an exception for Khan, who is a Muslim, to visit the US.
When asked about Britain’s membership of the EU, Trump said: “I’ve dealt with the European Union, it’s very, very bureaucratic, it’s very, very difficult. In terms of Britain, I would say: ‘What do you need it for?’ But again, let people make up their own mind.”
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