Saturday, 2 May 2026

The Chairman's Recipe for Marital Harmony

Chairman Bill’s Relationship Harmony Secrets are not, it should be said, the product of theory. They have been stress-tested in live environments, often repeatedly, and occasionally at considerable financial cost.


The chairman begins from a position of experience. Get divorced at least twice. This is not advice so much as a disclosure. It establishes credibility in the same way that a ship’s log records previous collisions. Lessons have been learned. Some of them may even have been the correct ones.

From there, the guidance becomes more operational. Never remarry the woman you divorced. The chairman does not elaborate, which in itself suggests that elaboration was once attempted and did not end well. The underlying principle is clear enough. Time improves memory far more reliably than it improves behaviour.

Domestic management is addressed through the established framework of pink and blue jobs. Without clear allocation of responsibility, both parties will assume the other has dealt with the bins, and neither of them will be correct. Where necessary, one may undertake pink jobs incompetently in order to avoid future assignment. This is an efficient short-term tactic, though it tends to generate downstream liabilities.

Conversely, blue jobs should be conducted with an air of quiet expertise. Even the tightening of a tap may be accompanied by a pause and a thoughtful expression. This discourages oversight, although excessive performance may provoke audit.

The chairman’s views on organisation are equally robust. A cluttered desk is a sign of multitasking ability. It should remain cluttered. This position becomes harder to defend when important documents enter a state of permanent concealment.

Travel presents particular hazards. On the day of departure in a motorhome, silence is the safest course. Something will have been forgotten. Attempts will be made to assign responsibility. Engagement at this stage is unlikely to improve the outcome. On return, a similar restraint is advised. The condition of the house, especially if it has been occupied by children, will already be under active review.

The chairman recognises the importance of shared activities. These need not be entirely authentic. Walking long distances provides proximity and a degree of mutual discomfort, both of which promote cohesion. Cultural engagement may also be required. One should watch selected television programmes with minimal audible scepticism.

Communication is treated with due seriousness. Not all conversations are requests for solutions. Some are requests for sympathy, which is a different service entirely. Failure to distinguish between the two has been identified as a recurring source of difficulty. Similarly, the response “nothing” to the question “what are you thinking?” has been extensively trialled and found wanting.

Administrative discipline is essential. Important dates are not tests of memory. They are scheduled obligations. They should be recorded in an online diary, with reminders and a degree of redundancy usually associated with critical infrastructure.

Timing matters. Serious discussions should not be initiated when either party is hungry, tired, or attempting to leave the house. These conditions are not conducive to reasoned exchange. Nor has the phrase “calm down” ever produced the desired effect, despite repeated field experiments.

Finally, the chairman offers a note on conflict resolution. If you are in the wrong, concede early. If you are in the right, consider whether it is worth proving. Peace is generally available at a modest price. Pride insists on paying more.

Harmony, in practice, is a series of negotiated ceasefires, punctuated by tea.


Friday, 1 May 2026

The Facts Arrive Slowly. The Assumptions Arrive Instantly

It is always the same pattern, just with different badges pinned on.

Something happens abroad. This time it is Israel, and inevitably Netanyahu is somewhere in the frame, doing what he does. The temperature rises, the coverage ramps up, and before long we are not talking about a government thousands of miles away, but about people walking to their cars in Golders Green.


The facts arrive slowly. The assumptions arrive instantly.

That is the real story, really. Before the police have even confirmed who did what, the guesses are already in circulation. The attacker must be this sort of person, must have come from that sort of place, must fit neatly into whatever narrative the commentator already favours. If the details are not yet available, that is not because they are unknown, but because they are being hidden. It all feels very certain, very quickly.

It is a curious sort of omniscience. Accusations of concealment are made before there is anything to conceal, and when the facts do eventually emerge, any overlap with the original guess is triumphantly presented as proof. One correct detail, arrived at by assumption, is treated as validation of the entire chain of reasoning. It is rather like diagnosing an engine fault by kicking the tyre, and then claiming expertise when it later turns out the battery was flat. We have all met that sort of mechanic.

Meanwhile, the more awkward facts sit quietly in the corner. The attacker turns out to be British, which rather ruins the “were they here legally” line. There is a history of violence and mental health issues, which is less politically useful and therefore less loudly proclaimed. The attack is often described as random, which leads to the next assertion that it could have been anyone.

Not quite. In a place like Golders Green, where roughly half the local population is Jewish, “anyone” already has a strong bias. And that is before you consider the obvious. If someone travels there specifically, at a time and place where Jewish people are most visible, the odds are no longer even. They are heavily tilted. What gets described as random is often nothing of the sort. It is targeted opportunity.

And even if you accept that risk, there is an obvious limit. You cannot put a police officer beside every visibly Jewish person in Golders Green, however much people seem to think that is now the standard. The expectation quietly shifts from “reduce risk” to “eliminate it entirely”, which is not something any police force has ever managed.

And then, almost immediately, the next set of demands arrives. Ban the marches. Stop the protests. Do something, anything, visibly decisive. Fair enough, up to a point. If a protest is likely to intimidate a specific group or is deliberately positioned where people cannot reasonably avoid it, then there is a case for restricting or moving it. That applies whether it is a pro-Palestine march or a crowd gathering outside asylum accommodation. The standard ought to be the same.

But consistency only gets you so far. Not every protest carries the same risk, and not every setting is comparable. A march through a city centre is one thing. A demonstration outside a place where people live or worship is another. The principle should be applied consistently, but the judgement will not always land in the same place. Treating unlike situations as identical is not fairness, it is laziness.

And then we get the broader explanation. This is all, apparently, because of Israel. There is a link, of course there is. Conflicts involving Israel raise the temperature, sharpen rhetoric, and give people something to be angry about. That anger, however, does not travel neatly. It is redirected, usually onto whoever happens to be nearest and most identifiable. It leaks, if you like, into the wrong places.

That is where the logic fails. Anger about a foreign government is applied to a local religious minority, as though the two were interchangeable. It is not a political argument, it is a category mistake dressed up as one. The same mechanism turns Islamist terrorism into suspicion of all Muslims. Visible outliers are taken as typical, and entire groups are quietly made to carry responsibility for actions they neither chose nor control. It is an old habit, really.

There is also a slightly awkward symmetry in how this plays out. Parts of the UK Jewish press, such as The Jewish Chronicle, do often take broadly supportive positions on Israel, and outsiders frequently read that as “what British Jews think”. The optics matter, even if the reality is more varied and, if you actually read it, often more argumentative than that.

But then look at the comparison. There is a UK Muslim press - The Muslim News, 5Pillars, and others - and some of it takes strong positions on foreign policy as well. Yet it is far less visible to outsiders, far less treated as representative, and far less used as a proxy for what “Muslims think”. Same country, same behaviour, entirely different treatment. Funny that.

That contrast tells you something uncomfortable. People are not applying a consistent standard. They are responding to what is most visible, most legible, and most convenient. A handful of outlets become stand-ins for entire communities, and from there it is only a short step to treating individuals as embodiments of those imagined positions. It saves thinking, which is always attractive.

We do not apply that standard evenly. When British Muslims are treated as collectively responsible for Islamist terrorism, we call it Islamophobia, quite rightly. Yet the same reasoning is quietly accepted, even indulged, when directed the other way. It is the same error, just pointed at a different target.

The truth is more prosaic and less satisfying. There has been a run of incidents. The police have increased patrols. They cannot prevent everything. Some attacks are predictable in risk but unpredictable in timing. Sometimes a violent individual decides to act, and all the systems in the world do not quite catch him in time.

Which leaves us where we started. A man is stabbed outside a synagogue, and within minutes the conversation has drifted from what happened to who we can blame, preferably in bulk. By the time the facts arrive, most people have already decided what they think, simply waiting for something they can point to as proof.

It would be nice to think we might one day reverse that order. I would not bet on it.


Thursday, 30 April 2026

A Pause, Not Rupture

There are moments in diplomacy when a country reveals, almost inadvertently, how it now sees the world. This was one of them.

I will admit to having been sceptical about the whole exercise. A state visit, heavy on ceremony and light on substance, felt like an attempt to paper over a relationship that has plainly lost some of its former solidity. Worse, it looked like an open invitation for Donald Trump to turn it into one of his set pieces, with King Charles and, by extension, Britain, cast in the role of polite but slightly awkward supporting act.


I was wrong.

Faced with an unpredictable Washington and a fraying relationship, Keir Starmer did not rely on a single grand strategy. He did something more pragmatic. He ran two in parallel. On one track, the political option. The quiet deployment of a figure like Peter Mandelson, a man whose entire career has been built on understanding power, access and leverage. A calculated gamble that skill, experience and a certain fluency in the darker arts of politics might unlock a difficult counterpart in Trump.

On the other, the constitutional route. The planned use of the King, not as decoration, but as a stabilising instrument. A different kind of influence entirely. Slower, quieter, but far harder to disrupt.

This was not confusion. It was hedging. The Mandelson track was always the more ambitious. High variance, potentially high reward. If it worked, it might have delivered real movement behind the scenes. If it failed, it would do so loudly. That risk was understood. It was part of the calculation.

What intervened was not a diplomatic misjudgement but political reality. Scandal entered the frame, and with it the loss of credibility. Whether or not the approach might have worked became irrelevant. In politics, a compromised messenger cannot carry a message. And Mandelson, with his long history and well-stocked list of enemies, would not merely have carried the message, he would have become the story, and a story that Trump would have been only too happy to exploit.

That left the royal track, which had been planned all along, to carry the weight.

And here, something interesting happened. Because the speech delivered by King Charles did not simply fill space. It was a piece of deliberate construction. Drafted within Buckingham Palace, overseen by Sir Clive Alderton, shaped by the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office and cleared through the Prime Minister’s office, it emerged as something closer to engineered diplomacy than conventional oratory.

Every line had a purpose. Every phrase had been weighed. And yet, none of it sounded forced.

The visit passed without incident. No rows, no theatrics, no public embarrassment. More than that, the King managed to restate a set of principles that sit uneasily with aspects of current US policy, and to do so in a way that did not trigger confrontation.

The King was not, in truth, speaking to Trump at all. He was speaking past him, to Congress, to the American system beyond the presidency.

And that worked.

Checks on executive power. The primacy of deliberation over the will of one. The necessity of alliances. Each statement harmless in isolation, quietly pointed in combination. The message delivered, the argument sidestepped. Trump was not challenged. But nor was he indulged.

And here is the mechanism. The criticism was framed in such a way that it did not demand recognition. It did not force a response. In a political environment where proximity to Trump tends to reward agreement and discourage correction, that matters. The system around him filters out dissent and amplifies affirmation. Direct challenge triggers reaction. Indirect argument, embedded in history and principle, passes through.

Whether Trump registered the rebuke is almost beside the point. Others did.

A political envoy would have had to engage directly. To persuade, to negotiate, to risk becoming part of the spectacle. Mandelson, for all his skill, would have been drawn into that dynamic and judged within it. His history, his style, his associations would all have been fair game, and very likely the main story.

The monarch cannot be drawn in like that. He has no deal to strike, no concession to offer, no position to defend in the usual sense. He stands outside the contest, and in doing so shapes its boundaries.

There is no grand irony here, just a clear demonstration of how diplomacy now works when the usual assumptions no longer hold. Britain prepared two approaches. One fell away under political pressure. The other proved not merely safe, but effective in the only arena that currently matters: the American system beyond the White House.

And that is the real point. What the speech achieved was not a reset in the present, but a signal about the future. It told America that all is not lost, that the relationship endures beyond the current moment, and that the shared values underpinning it remain intact. In effect, it was a message that this is a pause, not a rupture, and that when the present phase passes, the relationship can be rebuilt on foundations that are still there.

It does not resolve the underlying problems. The disagreements remain. The relationship is thinner, more conditional, more exposed to personality than either side would care to admit.

But it has been steadied, and placed in a longer perspective. In the current climate, that is not a small achievement.


Wednesday, 29 April 2026

The Salmon that Never Was

I opened the packet expecting salmon. Not a religious experience, just salmon. Pink, faintly oily, doing that quiet, self-confident thing salmon does when it knows it hasn’t been interfered with too much.


What I got instead was something that looked like salmon, but tasted like it had been through a committee.

This had come to us via Hay’s dad, who was heading off for the weekend and, in a moment of generosity tinged with urgency, pressed it into our hands on the basis that it might go off if left unattended. Fair enough. One respects a man trying to avoid waste. As it turns out, the sell by date is 2029, so there was perhaps a little less jeopardy than first assumed.

There it was, sitting on the plate in a small puddle of its own confusion, having been marinated in soy, garlic and curry powder, then sugared, then smoked, then, I suspect, given a pep talk about “bold flavours” before being sealed in plastic and sent out into the world. Somewhere along the way, the salmon itself appears to have slipped out the back door.

It’s an odd approach to food, when you think about it. Take an ingredient that people go out of their way to buy because it tastes of something, and then systematically remove any trace of that taste. It’s a bit like buying a decent bottle of claret and topping it up with cola, orange juice and a dash of Worcestershire sauce, just to make sure no one is troubled by the flavour of wine.

The result, in this case, is a texture best described as damp cardboard with ambition, and a flavour profile that lands somewhere between smoked mackerel and a slightly aggressive curry house. Not unpleasant in the sense that nothing is actively offensive, but deeply unsatisfying in the way that all compromise solutions are. You keep eating it, hoping the salmon might make a late appearance, but it never does.

There’s a kind of industrial logic to it. If the fish isn’t brilliant to begin with, you don’t improve it, you obscure it. Add salt, add sugar, add smoke, add anything that might distract from the fact that the central ingredient is quietly weeping in the corner. It’s the culinary equivalent of underseal on a rusty chassis. Looks solid from a distance, but you wouldn’t want to poke it too hard.

What’s slightly maddening is that salmon doesn’t need any of this. A bit of salt, a bit of restraint, perhaps the lightest touch of smoke if you must, and it does the rest itself. It’s one of the easiest things in the world to get right, provided you resist the urge to improve it.

But no. Somewhere in Canada, someone decided that what salmon really lacked was soy sauce and curry powder, and the rest of us are now living with the consequences.

I’ve got half a packet left, which, given its apparent ability to outlive us all, may yet become an heirloom. I might put it in a risotto, or mash it into fishcakes with enough lemon to remind it what it used to be. Or I might just leave it in the fridge as a warning to others.


Tuesday, 28 April 2026

When the Sums Only Matter for Someone Else

Richard Tice has been very clear that Angela Rayner cannot add up. This would carry more weight if his own companies had managed to get their corporation tax right.


Rayner’s offence is familiar enough. A muddle over council tax. Untidy, politically inconvenient, and easy to explain to anyone who has ever opened a local authority bill. It is precisely the sort of mistake that lends itself to moral outrage. Small, personal, and immediately comprehensible.

Tice has treated it as evidence of something larger. Not just an error, but a character flaw. Proof, we are invited to conclude, that Labour cannot be trusted with money.

At which point his own affairs rather intrude.

Richard Tice has been linked to a set of companies which appear to have underpaid corporation tax by around £100,000. The mechanism is not especially exotic. Income that should have been treated as taxable was instead handled as if it were tax free. Not a cunning piece of fiscal engineering. More a basic misunderstanding of how the rules apply.

That distinction matters. There is a long and tedious debate to be had about aggressive tax planning, loopholes, and the line between legal avoidance and something more dubious. This is not really that debate. This is closer to getting the sums wrong.

It is also not a one off. The issue appears across multiple companies in the same structure, all doing much the same thing in much the same way. One can make a mistake. Several entities all making the same mistake begins to look less like a slip and more like a system.

Tice’s response is that errors happen in business and can be corrected. That is true, as far as it goes. HMRC exists in part to tidy up after such things. But it does leave a slightly awkward contrast with the tone adopted towards Angela Rayner, where a single domestic error has been elevated into a general indictment of competence.

There is also the small matter of where the money goes. These companies sit within a wider structure that has channelled substantial funds into Reform UK. Which creates an unfortunate optic. Money that may not have been taxed as it should have been ends up helping to fund a political party that spends much of its time criticising others on fiscal responsibility.

None of this requires exaggeration. It is awkward enough as it stands.

What makes it more interesting is what it says about how these things are judged. A council tax error is politically lethal because everyone understands it. It is concrete. You can picture the bill, the envelope, the missed payment. It feels real.

Corporation tax, particularly when it involves property income and corporate structures, is different. It is opaque. Most people sensibly avoid thinking about it at all. Which makes it much easier to dismiss as a technicality, or to wrap in the reassuring language of “complex rules” and “professional advice”.

The result is a kind of asymmetry. Small mistakes that are easy to grasp become moral scandals. Larger ones that require a bit of explanation are treated as administrative footnotes.

Tice is hardly unique in this. It is a well established political habit. But he does illustrate it rather neatly.

If Angela Rayner’s council tax bill tells us something profound about Labour’s economic competence, then a set of companies misapplying basic tax rules might reasonably be thought to tell us something about Reform’s. If, on the other hand, one believes that these things are simply errors that can be corrected, then that principle ought to apply a little more consistently.

What does not really work is holding both positions at once.

In modern British politics, the test of economic credibility is not whether your numbers add up. It is whether your mistakes are simple enough for everyone else to understand.


Monday, 27 April 2026

A Week Spent Proving It Wasn’t the Pump

What begins, in the innocent mind, as “a slight drop in water pressure” turns out, in the motorhome, to be a week-long descent into hydraulic purgatory.

It starts simply enough. A trickle at the tap. Nothing dramatic. One assumes a tired pump, perhaps a bit of scale, the sort of thing that yields in an afternoon with a screwdriver and a cup of tea. That illusion survives for approximately ten minutes.

Soon you are contorted in a cupboard clearly designed for a small, double-jointed apprentice, staring at a series of plastic fittings that appear to have been installed by someone working from the inside out before the furniture was fitted. Which, of course, is exactly what happened.

There follows the first lesson of motorhome plumbing: nothing is where a rational person would put it, and everything important is just beyond reach.

This particular episode is taking place alongside a separate, cosmetic campaign. The canopy departed some years ago, leaving behind a set of holes which have already been filled, sanded and persuaded back into something approaching respectability. What remains is the absence of the original pinstriping, missing now for a couple of years, giving the vehicle a faintly unfinished, post-operative look. The current ambition is to restore those lines, and with them a semblance of originality.

This, in turn, has required the small matter of finding the right paint. Not one colour, but two. A bluish red of indeterminate parentage, and a silver that appears to have been formulated in a laboratory now lost to history. What follows is a purchasing exercise of impressive inefficiency: selecting what appears to be the correct shade, applying it, discovering that it is not, and repeating the process several times at steadily increasing cost. By the end, one has accumulated a small archive of almost-but-not-quite reds and a selection of silvers that range from optimistic to frankly delusional.

Having finally converged on something acceptably close, the pinstripes themselves are applied with the aid of a newly acquired rechargeable airbrush. This airbrush is, naturally, justified as a necessary precision instrument for the task in hand, and therefore entirely reasonable. The fact that the airbrush may never be used again is beside the point. A new tool has been acquired, and that in itself is a form of progress.

Meanwhile, back in the cupboard, the investigation proceeds.

You begin, sensibly, with the pump. It must be the pump. Pumps wear out, pumps fail, pumps are to blame. A new, uprated unit is installed with quiet confidence. It produces, when liberated from the system and allowed to discharge into a bucket, a vigorous and entirely reassuring gush.

So not the pump.

At this point, the process becomes deductive. If the pump is sound, then the restriction must lie downstream. The flow is equally miserable at both hot and cold taps, which introduces a further refinement: the fault must be before the system divides into hot and cold feeds. One begins to feel almost professional.

The plumbing, however, remains unimpressed.

Leaks are discovered and remedied. Unions are replaced. Mysterious fittings are identified. Small plastic inserts, long ignored in a box of “interesting things”, are finally recognised as essential rather than decorative. Each intervention is logical, each step justified, and each one followed by the same thin, dispiriting dribble from the tap.

Progress, such as it is, takes the form of eliminating what is not wrong.

The layout reveals itself in stages. From the tank, the water passes through a 90 degree elbow, then into a filter, then through a pressure switch incorporating a non-return valve, and only then does it split into the hot and cold circuits. A neat, linear arrangement, at least on paper.

In practice, it has been assembled with a certain creative flair.

A 12 mm system, it turns out, has been thoughtfully “enhanced” with 14 mm components, connected via adapters that appear to have been selected on the basis of optimism. The result is a sort of hydraulic Brexit, where everything technically still connects, but nothing works quite as it should and the losses are felt everywhere.

The elbow is examined. Innocent. The filter is scrutinised. Slightly restrictive, perhaps, but not enough to explain the near-collapse of civilisation. Which leaves the pressure switch and its internal non-return valve.

A modest device, outwardly. It has a little adjustment wheel. It looks helpful. It is, in fact, the hydraulic equivalent of a border crossing that appears open, but in practice admits nothing at all.

One attempts to blow through it. Nothing. One dismantles it. Cleans it. Reassembles it. It improves slightly, in the way a blocked artery might respond to encouragement, but remains fundamentally opposed to the concept of flow.

The internal piston moves freely when prodded with a screwdriver, which briefly raises hopes. Air will pass, but only when the valve is forced open beyond what it ever achieves in normal use. Left to its own devices, it opens just enough to give the impression of cooperation, while quietly throttling the entire system.

At this point, a broader question presents itself. Why is there a non-return valve here at all. In a motorhome of modest length, the worst that can happen without one is that a small quantity of water drains back into the tank, requiring the user to wait perhaps a second longer for the tap to produce anything useful. In return for this marginal convenience, one introduces a spring-loaded obstruction directly into the main supply line, along with a fresh opportunity for failure. It is an elegant solution to a problem that barely exists.

By now, several days have passed. The job has expanded to fill the week, as these things do. There has been crawling, dismantling, reassembly, and the occasional philosophical pause to consider why any of this was arranged in such a way. Outside, the freshly applied pinstripes now sit where they should have been all along, the vehicle regaining some of its intended appearance, assisted by an airbrush that will almost certainly spend the rest of its life in a drawer, waiting for a second act that may never come.

Eventually, the truth is no longer avoidable. The pressure switch is not merely part of the problem. It is the problem. Not because it is broken in any obvious sense, but because it no longer opens sufficiently to allow the system to function. It is a perfectly good valve, in theory, that in practice behaves as a carefully engineered restriction.

It is removed.

And suddenly, astonishingly, water flows. Not as a trickle, not as a suggestion, but as something approaching a usable supply. Spirits lift. Conclusions are drawn. Victory is declared, cautiously.

And then the mixer tap is dismantled.

Out of the end of the spout, where one might expect to find the usual limescale, comes not calcification but a quantity of fine debris drawn from the archaeological layers at the bottom of the tank. It has travelled the length of the system only to lodge itself in the smallest and most determinedly restrictive point available, namely the outlet of a domestic mixer tap pressed into service in a motorhome. The same arrangement exists in the bathroom. Hot and cold, having travelled separate paths, reunite at the final moment to be throttled together in perfect equality.

Which explains everything.

The flow was poor on both hot and cold because, of course, they were not separate at all. They were being mixed and then collectively strangled by a component designed for a different environment, now acting as a highly effective filter for whatever the tank chose to surrender.

The debris is removed. The aerators are cleaned. The shower, previously a gesture rather than a function, now sprays with something approaching intent. The system, at last, begins to behave like a system.

There remains, it must be said, a slight sense that all is not yet perfect. The elbows are still there, the runs not as straight as they might be, the inserts only now making their belated appearance. These will be addressed in due course, in the spirit of finishing what the original installer began but did not quite complete.

The final lesson is simple. Motorhome plumbing is not complicated, but it is unforgiving of bodges, compromises, unnecessary components, and devices that almost work. Above all, it rewards a certain cold, methodical elimination of possibilities, even as it resists every attempt to be accessed or understood.

Still, there is a certain satisfaction in the end result. The system now works, the layout makes sense, and every joint can be reached without dismantling half the interior. It has taken the best part of a week to achieve what should, in a better world, have been right from the start. The vehicle, meanwhile, now looks as though it remembers what it once was, even if the airbrush that made it so is already quietly entering retirement.

It may be 24 years old, but with sufficient persistence, it can at least be persuaded to behave, and, with the occasional acquisition of entirely justifiable new equipment, to look as though it has never been anything other than entirely original (and last another 24 years).


Sunday, 26 April 2026

State Visit Conversation

An imagined conversation between Trump and King Charles at the forthcoming State Visit:


King Charles: Delighted to join you for the celebrations. Two hundred and fifty years is quite an interval to hold a grudge.

Donald Trump: Not a grudge. A win. Big win. We beat you. Still counts.

King Charles: Yes, I had noticed the outcome seems to have settled the matter.

Trump: Totally settled. Nobody wants Britain back.

King Charles: Quite. One finds that once a population has expressed a clear preference, and fought to secure it, the question tends to resolve itself. The Americans managed it in 1776. The Falklanders rather later.

Trump: That was different.

King Charles: I am sure it always is.

Trump: The Falklands. I’m looking at it. Might change our position.

King Charles: On what grounds?

Trump: Deals. Leverage. You help me, I help you.

King Charles: I had rather thought the wishes of the inhabitants might carry some weight.

Trump: They voted, right?

King Charles: Overwhelmingly.

Trump: I like decisive results.

King Charles: As do others, when ballots are conducted in suitably persuasive conditions.

Trump: Strong leadership.

King Charles: Indeed. One hears Vladimir Putin excels at it.

Trump: He gets things done.

King Charles: So it would appear.

Trump: China too. Very strong on Taiwan.

King Charles: Provided the question is framed correctly.

Trump: You’ve got to ask the right question.

King Charles: And ensure the answer does not prove inconvenient.

Trump: Exactly.

King Charles: A flexible approach to principle.

Trump: That’s politics.

King Charles: So I am told.

Trump: Anyway, small islands. Not many people.

King Charles: Small populations can be remarkably clear about who governs them. You may recall the difficulty America once had here.

Trump: We were very clear.

King Charles: “We”? Your family was British at the time. Scots, if I recall.

Trump: That’s different.

King Charles: Naturally.

Trump: Your son Harry. Not good. Says things. Disrespectful.

King Charles: Families can be complicated. I’m sure you wouldn’t mind me criticising your children. What’s good for a President is good for a King.

Trump: That’s not the same.

King Charles: No, I rather thought you might say that.

Trump: My kids are great. Very successful.

King Charles: As are mine. The distinction, I gather, lies in whether one calls it tradition or nepotism.

Trump: My kids are loyal.

King Charles: Loyalty is invaluable. Particularly when it runs in the expected direction. Mine are Royal.

Trump: They know what works.

King Charles: As, I suspect, do the voters of the Falklands.

Trump: Still thinking about that one.

King Charles: Naturally. A question of principle.

Trump: And deals.

King Charles: Yes. One sees the tension.

Trump: Big anniversary. You must be proud.

King Charles: Proud, certainly. Though perhaps not in quite the way you mean.

Trump: You lost, we won.

King Charles: And yet here we are, marking the result together. Time, it seems, has a way of settling these matters.

Trump: Unless someone reopens them.

King Charles: One hopes not.


Falklands, Principles and Convenient Amnesia

The Falklands argument has the curious quality of a pub row that has gone on so long everyone has forgotten who spilled the first pint, but everyone remains absolutely certain they were in the right. Recently, however, a man from another pub has wandered over, announced that the rules are about to change, and made it clear that they will depend less on law than on his current mood.


Enter Donald Trump, who has toyed with the idea of withdrawing American support for Britain’s position on the Falkland Islands, not because of any fresh insight into 19th century sovereignty, but as leverage in unrelated disputes. Principles, it seems, are now available on a flexible tariff. One half expects them to be listed alongside steel.

Start with self-determination, that noble principle which the United Nations holds aloft like a slightly dented trophy. All peoples, it says, have the right to decide their own future. A fine idea, until it collides with another fine idea, namely that borders should not be casually redrawn every time someone produces an old map and a wounded sense of history.

Into this stroll the Falklands, population modest, sheep plentiful, opinions remarkably consistent. When asked in 2013 whether they fancied remaining British, they replied with the sort of emphatic clarity usually reserved for questions like “more wine?” The answer was yes, and by a margin that would make a Soviet election official blush.

The British position is therefore disarmingly simple. These people live there. They like the current arrangement. End of story.

Argentina, by contrast, insists this is not the story at all. The islands, it says, were improperly taken in 1833, and the current inhabitants are essentially a historical afterthought. Self-determination, in this telling, is admirable in theory but inconvenient in practice.

The difficulty is that Argentina’s case rests on a rather slight foundation. The “Argentine population” of the islands in the early 1830s turns out to have been a small, unruly settlement under Louis Vernet, who was not Argentine in any meaningful modern sense at all but a Hamburg-born merchant operating out of Buenos Aires under contract. His colony included a mix of Europeans and gauchos and was already unravelling before the British arrived. Calling it a nation in exile is generous. Calling it a functioning colony requires a certain imagination.

Meanwhile, back in South America, Argentina itself exists because a European colonial system was dismantled and replaced with something new, the borders largely frozen under the convenient doctrine that whatever lines existed at independence would do nicely, thank you. Entirely sensible. If one started reopening every historical grievance, half the globe would be returned to its previous occupants and the rest would be in litigation.

So we arrive at the pleasing spectacle of a country founded on the practical decision not to revisit the past arguing that, in this one instance, we really must revisit the past. Not all of it, obviously. Just the helpful bits.

At this point it is worth glancing east, where Vladimir Putin has developed his own enthusiasm for self-determination in Ukraine. There, too, history is invoked, borders are declared provisional, and referenda appear at convenient moments. The results are not just decisive but remarkably aligned with the presence of armed men and the absence of meaningful choice.

Further east still, China takes a close interest in Taiwan. Here, self-determination is treated rather like an optional extra that has been quietly removed from the base model. The population votes, certainly, but not on the question that matters.

Lest Britain grow too comfortable on its moral perch, it is worth recalling that it once took a similarly dim view of colonial preferences. When the American colonies decided they had had quite enough, the response was not a seminar on political rights but the American War of Independence. The idea that the United Kingdom might still have a claim on the United States is now treated, quite rightly, as absurd. Time, recognition, and the settled will of the population have done their work.

All of which is mildly inconvenient for Donald Trump, whose occasional enthusiasm for revisiting other people’s borders sits uneasily alongside the settled outcome of his own country’s.

For comparison, consider the Channel Islands. Closer to France than to England, once tied to Normandy, and under the British Crown for centuries. No one in Paris is losing sleep over Jersey. No resolutions are passed. No impassioned speeches about historical injustice echo through the corridors of diplomacy. Time has done its work, and no one now pretends otherwise.

Which brings us back to the Falklands. Britain says it re-established control in 1833, pointing to an earlier presence in the 18th century. Argentina says it was an outright seizure. Both are, in their own way, tidying up the narrative. The historical record is messier, as it so often is.

But here is the awkward point. In modern international law, what happened in 1765 or 1833 matters less than what has happened since. Continuous administration. A settled population. And, awkwardly for Argentina, that population’s very clear preference.

None of this makes the legal argument vanish. The United Nations still calls it a dispute, and diplomacy requires a certain polite fiction that the matter is open. But in practice, the centre of gravity has shifted from historical grievance to present reality.

So the argument continues, fuelled by history, pride and a distinctly selective attachment to principle. The islanders go on voting as they please. Britain goes on pointing at them. Argentina goes on pointing at old maps. Washington treats the matter as a bargaining chip. Moscow produces a referendum. Beijing produces a doctrine.

And somewhere in the background, self-determination sits looking slightly embarrassed, watching maps waved, ballots staged, and histories edited, and wondering why it is so often invoked only after the answer has already been decided.


Saturday, 25 April 2026

A Convenient Moment to Postpone Washington

It is hard not to admire the sheer generosity of Donald Trump. At a stroke, he has handed Keir Starmer and King Charles a neatly wrapped excuse to do something they probably rather fancied anyway, which is to not go to Washington just now.


We are told, quite properly, that Prince Harry is a private citizen and nothing to do with the machinery of state. Except, miraculously, he becomes geopolitically significant the moment Trump decides to hold forth about him. One minute he is a detached Californian with a title, the next he is apparently the voice of Britain, or at least the man Trump must publicly swat down to demonstrate that he, uniquely, speaks for us all. It is a constitutional innovation of some flair.

Now imagine the scene. The King arrives in Washington, all careful dignity and studied neutrality, only for his host to open proceedings with a riff about "your son" and how he does not represent the country. One can almost hear the crockery tightening. Not quite a breach of protocol, more a drive-by denting of it.

At this point, a sensible government might reflect that state visits are meant to lubricate diplomacy, not provide light entertainment. They are choreographed to the inch precisely to avoid this sort of thing. When the choreography looks likely to be upstaged by improvised family commentary, the wise course is not to press on regardless, but to discover an urgent pressure on the royal diary.

And what a gift of a pretext this is. No need for melodrama or offended statements. Just a gentle murmur about timing, about the pressures of the international situation, about ensuring that any visit takes place in the most "constructive atmosphere". Diplomatic code for "let's wait until everyone can be trusted not to mention the Duke of Sussex before the soup arrives".

Of course, none of this will be admitted. We will be assured that the relationship between the United Kingdom and the United States remains as robust as ever, which is true in the way that bridges remain robust even when people are shouting at each other on them. Behind the scenes, though, there will be a perfectly rational calculation that a state visit should not double as an exercise in familial awkwardness.

So yes, Harry is irrelevant in constitutional terms and a non-factor diplomatically. And yet, thanks to Trump's inability to resist a passing swipe, he has become the most useful scheduling conflict in recent memory. One suspects Whitehall already has the pencil in hand, and is quietly looking for a polite way to use it.


The Price of Treating Allies as Counterparties

Call it strategy if you like. It looks more like vandalism.


The United States has spent decades building something rather unusual in international politics - a dense web of relationships that function not just on power, but on a working assumption of reliability. Not perfect reliability, not blind faith, but enough consistency that allies could plan on it. Intelligence could be shared. Commitments could be made. Risks could be taken together. That is what is now being chipped away.

The suggestion that Washington might "review" its position on the Falkland Islands is not a policy. It is a threat, floated in irritation, in response to allied reluctance over Iran. No ships are sailing, no flags are being lowered. On paper, nothing has changed. In practice, something has.

Because a long-settled position, one tied up with self-determination and quiet alignment since the Falklands War, is suddenly being treated as a bargaining chip. Support us on Iran, or we start revisiting your sovereignty claims. It is not serious diplomacy. It is leverage applied without regard to where it lands, and allies notice that sort of thing.

To see why it matters, it helps to step out of geopolitics and into a world where reputation is enforced more ruthlessly. Take the Baltic Exchange. For generations it has underpinned maritime trade not through force, but through trust. Deals are struck quickly, often on the strength of reputation, with the expectation that what is agreed will stand. Contracts exist, of course, but they sit on top of something more basic - the assumption that the other party is not treating every agreement as provisional.

Now imagine a broker who behaves like this. He agrees a fixture, then hints he might revisit it if the counterparty does not do him a favour elsewhere. He drags unrelated disputes into settled deals and treats every commitment as a source of leverage for the next negotiation. He would not be expelled with ceremony. He would simply find that serious business goes elsewhere.

That is the risk the United States is now running. International agreements are more complex than shipping fixtures, but the underlying logic is the same. Trade deals, investment frameworks, technology partnerships and legal cooperation all depend on a baseline expectation that commitments are not casually reopened for tactical gain. Remove that expectation and behaviour adjusts, not dramatically but methodically.

Counterparties narrow what they are willing to agree, insist on tighter terms and more safeguards, and hold back on anything sensitive. They take longer to decide and offer less when they do. None of this makes headlines, but all of it imposes cost.

For the United States, those costs accumulate in awkward places. Negotiations become slower and less ambitious, investment is priced more cautiously, and cooperation in sensitive areas becomes more guarded. The advantage of being the default partner, the one others instinctively turn to, begins to fade at the margins.

There is an irony here. A tactic designed to extract more from allies risks producing the opposite. If every agreement may be reopened, the rational response is to concede less in the first place.

The United States will not be pushed out of the system. It is too central, too capable, too necessary. There is no alternative market waiting down the street. But the Baltic analogy still holds where it matters. You do not need to be thrown out to lose your standing. You only need to become a party others approach with caution, document more heavily, and, where possible, avoid.

That is not isolation. It is something quieter, and in the long run, more damaging.