When TV cameras are let in to movie world leaders assembly in individual, the ensuing footage is often extremely boring for journalists and extremely protected for politicians.
Not with Donald Trump.
Sir Keir Starmer ran the gauntlet on Monday.
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Put by a complete of virtually 90 minutes of televised questioning alongside the American chief, it was his diciest encounter with the president but.
However he nonetheless nearly emerged intact.
For a begin, he can declare substantive coverage wins after Trump introduced further stress on Vladimir Putin to barter a ceasefire and dialled up the priority over the devastating scenes coming from Gaza.
There have been awkward moments aplenty although.
Prime of the checklist is Mr Trump’s trashing of the prime minister’s Labour colleague, London mayor Sir Sadiq Khan.
However extra vital than that, Monday’s assembly was the clearest illustration of the political gulf that separates the 2 leaders.
“He is barely extra liberal than me,” Mr Trump mentioned of Sir Keir when he arrived in Scotland.
What an understatement.
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On inexperienced vitality, immigration, taxation and on-line regulation, the variations have been clear to see.
Sir Keir nearly managed to paper over the cracks by chuckling at instances, selecting his interventions rigorously and all the time trying to sound eminently affordable.
At instances, it had the vitality of a person being pressured to smile and bear inappropriate feedback from his in-laws at an vital household dinner.
However hey, it stopped a full Trump implosion – so I suppose that is a win.
My principal takeaway from this Scotland go to although shouldn’t be a lot the political gulf current between the 2 males, however the gulf in energy.
Sir Keir flew the size of the nation he results in be the visitor on the visiting president’s resort.
He was then pressured to take a seat by greater than an hour of uncontrolled, freewheeling questioning from a person most of his social gathering and voters despise, throughout which he was provided unsolicited recommendation on the way to beat Nigel Farage and criticised (albeit not directly) on key planks of his authorities’s coverage platform.
In return he acquired heat phrases about him (and his spouse) and comparatively incremental bulletins on two overseas coverage priorities.
So why does he do it?
As a result of, to borrow a quote from a well-liked American political TV sequence: “Air Power One is a giant aircraft and it makes a hell of a noise when it lands in your head.”