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Donald Trump and Theresa May’s joint news conference: what they said – and what they really meant

Our chief political commentator imagines what was really going through the minds of the president and the prime minister

John Rentoul
Westminster
Tuesday 04 June 2019 21:34 BST
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'We're going to have absolutely an agreement on Huawei', says Donald Trump

What she actually said: I am very pleased to welcome the president of the United States of America on this state visit to the United Kingdom.

What she really meant: Ladies and gentlemen, I give you Barack Obama.

What she said: For the past two and a half years, the president and I have had the duty and privilege of being the latest guardians of this precious and profound friendship between our countries.

What she meant: We are all “here today, gone tomorrow” politicians, and that includes you, Donald. I’m not saying I’ll be pleased if you turn out to be a one-term president.

What she said: Like prime ministers and presidents before us, and no doubt those that will come after – we can also differ sometimes on how to confront the challenges we face.

What she meant: I’m sorry to go, obviously, but the one bit I won’t miss will be the weary sigh at about 1 o’clock in the afternoon: “What’s he tweeted now.”

What she said: I have always talked openly with you, Donald, where we have taken a different approach – and you have done the same with me.

What she meant: I have been polite to you. You have been rude to me. But what the hell. I’m off in a few days, retiring with my sudokus.

What she said: I also set out the UK’s approach to tackling climate change and our continued support for the Paris agreement.

What she meant: I know, it’s not exactly Hugh Grant, is it? But in my quiet, home counties, Church of England way, I told him what’s what.

What the president actually said: We remember the heroes that laid down their lives to rescue civilisation itself … Normandy … The liberal – liberation of Europe ... They saved freedom for the world ... Bonds of friendship sealed in blood.

What he really meant: It says here. A bit colourful, this stuff, isn’t it? I wrote it all myself. Well, I could have written it all myself. I’m a busy man. I have important stuff to do, so sometimes I get my people to do this stuff for me. Is there much more of this?

What he said: Freedom and independence as a sacred birthright…

What he meant: Yeah, nearly done.

What he said: The United States is committed to a phenomenal trade deal. Probably two or three times what we are doing at the moment.

What he meant: We will buy up your whole country and rinse it in chlorine.

What he said: We will visit the legendary Churchill War Rooms.

What he meant: Where the legendary Winston Churchill burnt the cakes after he pulled the sword out of the stone.

What he said [to Theresa May]: You are a tremendous professional and a person that loves your country dearly.

What he meant: All these journalists came to see you give me a piece of your mind because you have nothing to lose, and they came to see me humiliate you just because I could. Well, fake news media, I never do what you expect. I am going to be gracious.

What he said: I don’t know Jeremy Corbyn. He wanted to meet today or tomorrow and I decided I would not do that.

What he meant: Theresa suggested I tell him to get lost. Seemed like a smart idea.

What he said [asked if Britain should leave the EU]: I don’t like to take positions on things I’m not really – I understand the issue very well. I predicted what was going to happen.

What he meant: I am physically incapable of saying that I do not know everything about everything.

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What he said: I believe it [Brexit] will happen. I believe the prime minister’s brought it to a very good point where something will happen in the not-too-distant future.

What he meant: She has made a complete mess of it and now Boris Johnson will take my advice and sort it out in a matter of minutes.

What she said: Obviously it will be for whoever succeeds me as prime minister. The president suggested we sue the EU. We didn’t take that advice.

What she meant: The man’s a fool who knows nothing about international negotiation.

What he said: She’s probably a better negotiator than I am. Perhaps you won’t be given the credit you deserve.

What he meant: You’ll probably get the credit you deserve.

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