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Monthly Archives: June 2021
Tens of thousands of British people in Europe could soon become ‘undocumented migrants’ thanks to Brexit – Business Insider
Posted: June 6, 2021 at 7:37 pm
Up to 100,000 British citizens living in mainland Europe have less than a month to apply for permanent residency on the continent or risk becoming unauthorized immigrants with the threat of lost rights or deportation.
Under post-Brexit rules, UK citizens who live in countries including France, Malta, and Luxembourg are required to apply for residency by June 30 or risk losing basic rights.
But tens of thousands living abroad have still not applied, leading to concerns that those affected could lose access to services such as healthcare as a result of their new status.
"We are now less than a month before our deadline, and people just do not know what the consequences will be they don't know exactly how their lives will be impacted," Kalba Meadows, a resident in France who cofounded the citizens-rights group France Rights, told Insider.
"If they haven't applied before the deadline and they aren't due to have reasonable grounds for a late application, they're going to become undocumented migrants.
"What the actual consequences of that will be we don't know, but it is highly likely that they will lose access to healthcare. That has serious consequences, especially for the elderly and vulnerable."
Fourteen of the European Union's 27 member states granted automatic residency to British citizens who were already living there when the UK left the bloc, but the remaining 13 require UK citizens to apply.
Those countries include Belgium, Denmark, France, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands, which has extended the deadline to November 30.
According to the EU-UK joint committee on citizens' rights, 298,000 British citizens need to apply for residency but only 190,100 had done so by April 28.
That figure included 25,500 people in France from a total of 148,300 who had not applied by the end of April.
British in Europe, a citizens-rights group, has called for other member states to extend the deadline, a spokesperson, Fiona Godfrey, told Insider.
The UK several months ago issued guidelines on how it would treat late applications from people affected by COVID-19.
Godfrey said that British in Europe had asked the European Commission for similar guidelines in member EU states and that no guidelines had been published so far. The European Commission did not immediately respond to a request from Insider for comment.
"The thing we don't know is if the deadlines are not extended if people do wake up undocumented on July 1 what that will actually mean for them," Godfrey said. "I've asked in meetings: What concretely will that mean for them? We haven't been told that."
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Sort it out, Liz! Truss branded ‘wholly irresponsible’ as 500m post-Brexit deal nears – Daily Express
Posted: at 7:37 pm
The UK, led by International Trade Secretary Liz Truss, are in continued talks over a post-Brexit Free Trade Agreement (FTA) with Australia and are hopeful striking a deal within the next two weeks. Both countries have agreed on the vast majority of issues for a deal, which official estimates say could add 500million to British economic output over the long term, but reports have suggested this could include a period of up to 15 years with zero-tariffs and zero-quotas. The proposal has faced a huge backlash from British farmers, who have warned they face being undercut by a wave of meat imports from Australia that could flood the market under an FTA.
The National Farmers' Union is furious at the UK Government for pressing ahead with the trade proposal, and has warned it will have "serious implications for British farming" and offer "little benefit" to the wider economy.
The farming union also warned the trade deal with Australia could threaten the farming sector and lead to the collapse of any, many beef and sheep farms throughout the UK - even if tariffs are dropped immediately.
NFU President Minette Batters told Express.co.uk: It is incredibly disappointing to hear news of the Governments trade strategy from sources other than the Government themselves, especially when its reported plans will have such a massive impact on British farming.
There remains a huge amount of unanswered questions about exactly how decisions regarding trade policy have been made, on what basis and how it will operate in the future.
"Its crucial urgent answers are provided to these questions.
It is also incredibly concerning that the Government is in a sprint to sign up to a trade deal with Australia that would have serious implications for British farming and would seemingly offer incredibly little benefit to the economy.
We continue to maintain that a tariff-free trade deal with Australia will jeopardise our own farming industry and could cause the demise of many, many beef and sheep farms throughout the UK.
"This is true whether tariffs are dropped immediately or in 15 years time."
READ MORE:Let's get our sovereignty back! Eurexit campaign mocks VDL
We remain of the view that it is wholly irresponsible for Government to sign a trade deal with no tariffs or quotas on sensitive products and which therefore undermines our own domestic economy and food production industry.
Last week, Britain and Australia held another round of talks as both countries look to press ahead with an agreement on a lucrative FTA.
British High Commissioner to Australia Vicki Treadell said the UK's International Trade Secretary Liz Truss and her Australian counterpart Dan Tehan held talks late on Thursday.
She said: "We are working hard to have an agreement in principle at the bilateral between Prime Ministers Johnson and Morrison on June 15.
"Last night secretary state Liz Truss had another session with Trade Minister Tehan and respective chief negotiators."
The proposed post-Brexit trade deal with Austria is the most advanced of several agreements currently being pursued by the UK Government.
On Wednesday, member nations of the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) on Wednesday agreed to allow Britain to start the process of joining the pact.
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Brian Cox’s gloomy Brexit claim over ‘transferring rights from individuals’ torn apart – Express
Posted: at 7:37 pm
Apollo 11: Brian Cox says aerospace wasnt ready for it
The 53-year-old is back on screens today as the second episode of his BBC series 'Brian Coxs Adventures in Space and Time airs. The new documentary-series reviews how space exploration has developed in the past decade, while looking at some of the most remarkable discoveries made. Heralded for his ability to invigorate the nation's interest in physics, Prof Cox is also an ardent Remainer, and has been vocal in his wish that the UK would continue its membership in the EU.
But one remark the physicist made was shut down by critics on Twitter, after he claimed that he saw "Brexit as a transfer of rights from the individual to Government".
Prof Cox was sharing an article about how Brexit is "destroying music", as a result of musicians and artists not getting the desired assurances over visas to ensure they can perform and go on tour in the bloc.
The Guardian article from earlier this year detailed an account from musician Joseph Middleton, who said that in order for him to complete a concert in Spain, which had been booked in for two years, he would have to spend 600 in "visa-related bills".
This led Prof Cox to tweet: "I have always seen Brexit as a transfer of rights from the individual to Government.
"We had the right to work, to export our fish, to play our music, to buy and import goods, whatever... across our continent. Now we have to seek permission."
But his comment saw a fierce backlash from social media users, who argued that Prof Cox had actually got his argument wrong.
One wrote: "No, we the people as a collective group, our govt signed us up as members of an elite club. The group had a vote as individuals and decided to leave.
"The biggest expression of one man one vote weve had. It was a transfer of power from the govt to the individual."
JUST IN:Brian Cox told to 'learn his lesson' after call to 'shelve Brexit'
A second explained that although "you have to seek permission" it was the "EU that is making this terrible for everyone" as applications have to be made to them.
They continued: "Their insistence on punishing the UK by needlessly complicating things.
"The anti-democratic fervour at the heart of the EU project is being laid bare."
A third added: "You've got it backwards, Brian.
"It's a transfer of power to the national Government, sure. But that power was transferred from the EU, not from the British people."
DON'T MISS:Brian Cox called for Einstein's theory revamp before new discovery[ANALYSIS]Brian Cox left stunned at Boris Johnson 'losing his cool' in PMQs[INSIGHT]Brian Cox shut down after 'woke prof' tried to 'preach about politics[UPDATE]
The physicist, who was also a musician in a number of popular bands, has authored or co-authored more than 950 scientific publications.
He is perhaps best-known for presenting a range of science programmes including his BBC Wonders of series.
But that encounter was the not the first time the Remainer has upset fans.
Last year, he claimed the moment [Boris Johnson] is gone the UK will begin a process of negotiating with the EU adding that the only way to take back control is to rejoin.
This caused anger, as did his comments after he targeted Home Secretary Priti Patel and her plans to intercept migrants crossing the Channel.
Ms Patel wrote: We need the cooperation of the French to intercept boats and return migrants back to France.
I know that when the British people say they want to take back control of our borders this is exactly what they mean."
He replied: Im so sick of this the British people nonsense.
Its inflammatory and divisive and also errant vacuous nonsense with no meaning in a multi-party democracy.
The phrase should be banned from political discourse.
But people were not entirely on Prof Cox's side, including one who wrote: "Woke professor calls for the phrase the British people to be banned. He would never say this about the French people or the German people,' of course.
Brian Coxs Adventures in Space and Time airs tonight on BBC Two from 9pm.
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Brian Cox's gloomy Brexit claim over 'transferring rights from individuals' torn apart - Express
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Brexit fuelling rise in interest in Jersey from the super-rich – Jersey Evening Post
Posted: at 7:37 pm
Picture: DAVID FERGUSON. (30990590)
Fifteen applications from wealthy individuals were approved in the first five months of the year equalling the target for the whole of 2021.
Four families have visited the Island this week to explore the potential for relocation.
And with about 23 applications being granted annually between 2016 and 2020, officials say the number of high-net-worth individuals moving to Jersey could be well above average this year.
The interest comes during a boom period for the housing market which recently saw a property in St Brelade sold for a record 31 million after two millionaires became embroiled in a bidding war.
Economic Development Minister Lyndon Farnham predicted a total for successful candidates in the 20s by the end of the year. While stressing that there was no cap, he said the numbers were carefully managed.
We have to maintain a balance and are mindful of letting the number go too far, but whether we have 15 or 25 [successful applications] there is no indication that this does anything other than benefit the Island, he said.
I believe the uncertainty resulting from Brexit and the pandemic have been contributory factors Jersey continues to be very stable economically and politically and an attractive place to live.
Senator Farnham said the benefits to the Island went beyond the revenue achieved through income tax, stamp duty and business activities of wealthy immigrants.
Theres a quality over quantity issue here if people are purely interested in relocating for financial reasons, there are other jurisdictions with lower tax rates where they could go, he said.
The minister added: We want to attract people who want to be part of the community and will contribute to Island life through investing in local industry and philanthropic activities those contributions may be less easy to measure than tax revenue, but they are very significant.
Kevin Lemasney, head of high-value residency engagement for the Government of Jersey, said 2021 was likely to see the second-highest number of successful applications. 2017 was the busiest year on record, he said, with 34 applications granted as interest in moving to Jersey surged in the wake of the UKs 2016 Brexit vote, the 2017 UK general election and the election of Donald Trump to the US Presidency the previous year.
Mr Lemasney recently told a meeting of the Economic and International Affairs Scrutiny Panel that while there was no strict upper limit on approvals, the target figure was 15 and there was an appreciation that Locate Jersey would work with ministers to combat the situation if the figure went above 20 and there was any indication the process might be overheated.
High-value residents are required to demonstrate assets of at least 10 million and income that is comfortably and sustainably in excess of 725,000 meaning each pays 145,000 in income tax at the standard rate of 20%. A total of 155 residents have made the move within the past ten years, the meeting heard.
Mr Lemasney said the threshold figures for assets and income were due to be reviewed every five years, with the next set of changes due to be brought in on 1 January 2023. Prior to that date, the minimum price figures for properties bought by high-value arrivals are set to increase later this year.
From 1 September, an apartment bought by a high-value resident must cost at least 1.25m an increase from 900,000 while there will be a minimum house price of 2.5m previously 1.75m.
Asked by panel chairman David Johnson whether there might be further changes to increase the revenue received by the Island, Mr Lemasney said this was ultimately a matter for the States Assembly, but that Jersey already had quite an onerous application process and may not wish to lose ground to rival jurisdictions, notably Guernsey.
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Brexit fuelling rise in interest in Jersey from the super-rich - Jersey Evening Post
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Highland hotels are suffering from a lack of workers due to Brexit and Covid – The National
Posted: at 7:37 pm
HOME Secretary Priti Patel is being asked to visit businesses in the Highlands to see first-hand the recruitment crisis facing tourism and hospitality as a result of Brexit.
SNP MP Drew Hendry has written a letter to the UK minister warning the situation is so bad venues are facing the prospect of closing their doors due to staffing shortages, not long after being able to reopen following easing of Covid restrictions.
He said while factors such as the pandemic have contributed to the crisis, the overarching cause of the shortages is Brexit and the failure of the UK Government to heed calls to protect freedom of movement or put a workable visa solution in place.
He wrote: Local businesses are doing all they can to attract workers, including offering significant wage rises. However, they are still struggling to attract staff due to demographic challenges in our region and the seasonal nature of this work. This is why freedom of movement has been so vital to the Highlands.
Last week it was reported The Winking Owl restaurant in Aviemore has had to go to drinks only because it has been unable to staff its kitchen. The Applecross Inn, in Wester Ross, has also recently reported struggling to get staff which resulted in a cut to opening days.
Hendry, who represents Inverness, Nairn, Badenoch and Strathspey, said: Hospitality and tourism businesses across my constituency are feeling the full impact of a post-Brexit UK.
READ MORE:Gerry Hassan: Dirty camping in Scotland is a symptom of a worldwide problem
Having just come out of a pandemic, they are now dealing with a staffing crisis, leaving many of them struggling to keep their doors open.
While the pandemic has exacerbated the staffing challenges, Brexit and hostile Tory rhetoric created this crisis, and the situation is only getting worse.
Hendry said the Home Secretary seemed intent on doing everything she can to make the UK as unattractive as possible for migration.
In his letter he has requested Patel visit Aviemore to meet with some of the businesses at the frontline of this hostile environments negative impacts.
He said: Like those across Scotland, our local tourism businesses need a migration policy that meets our regions distinct needs to staff their operations. Throughout the Brexit fiasco, my SNP colleagues and I repeatedly told the Tory Government that securing the right of EU citizens to work freely in Scotland had to be a priority to protect our economy.
They ignored us then, and they are ignoring this crisis now.
Emmanuel Moine, a hotel general manager and chair of the Inverness Hotels Association, said the Covid crisis had added to staffing problems caused by Brexit.
He said: Since Brexit we have nobody coming into the UK to work. It is even worse now because of Covid on top of that.
We had a lot of staff who went home because they felt it was not really welcoming.
With Covid, we had some excellent staff, but they left the trade. They have got another job now and dont want to come back, which is fair enough.
He said the Highlands was one of the most popular destinations in the UK for staycations which was welcome, but the current uncertainty around Covid meant added pressures for businesses.
It was English holidays last week I spoke to a lot of managers of hotels, restaurants and bars and we all got hammered as we didnt expect so many people, he said. We filled up the hotel within four or five days people are not making plans. So you are left suddenly with 70 rooms to clean, you dont have the staff.
We put an advert for a housekeeper last week and made 10 appointments for people who all said they would come. But only two turned up.
READ MORE:Scottish travel sector needs our support with bookings still slow
He emphasised hospitality businesses wanted guests to visit and they would be very well looked after, but said it was a challenging time for the trade. Ive heard some restaurants just cant open. They dont have staff in the kitchen, they dont have staff in the restaurant, so it is difficult, he said.
A UK Government spokesperson said the new points based immigration system encourages employers to invest in the domestic workforce, rather than relying on labour from abroad.
He added: Weve implemented an unprecedented package of measures to support businesses throughout the United Kingdom during the pandemic and our Plan for Jobs is helping people across the country retrain, build new skills and get back into work.
Were working with UK hospitality to better promote jobs in the sector via our nationwide network of Jobcentres, and are supporting workers into these roles through the Kickstart Scheme and our expanded apprenticeship and traineeship offers.
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Highland hotels are suffering from a lack of workers due to Brexit and Covid - The National
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Brexit remains the elephant in the room in UK politics – The New European
Posted: at 7:37 pm
Leaders of the main Westminster parties are failing to call out thiscatastrophic error
Alastair Campbell is absolutely right - a majority of the UK population appears not to give a toss about Johnson's failings, lies, false claims and dodgy dealings, but he should be assured that a lot of people are angry about the damage being done to our country. The government suppresses a lot of that anger by announcing populist measures, so quite a few people then shrug their shoulders and say, in effect, "Well, that's OK then, at least he's trying to do something about it" (whatever "it" is on that particular day, such is the frequency of the blunders - last week's having been the education catch-up funding debacle).
In any case, getting angry doesn't change anything, especially when most of the media support a PM who is manifestly unfit for office, but manages to blag his way through. What makes a difference is having a credible and united opposition. As things stand, I don't really know what Labour stands for, what the vision is for a much better Britain, what their priorities would be if they came to power, how things would be different. What I see is internal strife and a policy vacuum. If I vote Labour, what am I voting for? At present, I don't have a clue.
The manifold problems caused by Brexit are now really coming to the fore - the great British public will notice when there's nobody to prepare their al fresco lunch in The Lake District or Cornwall, when the shortage of NHS workers causes their appointment to be postponed yet again, when the inferior work on their new home results in a snagging list the size of War and Peace, their new cheaper Chinese appliance goes up in flames and they finally realise just how many disadvantages Brexit has brought. Who is going to be brave enough to call out this catastrophic error, level with us and tell the public just how wrong we were to leave the EU? Then there would be a genuine choice, as EU membership signals a whole raft of very different policy choices, and a very different vision for the country's future.
Brexit is the root of many people's anger, but nobody is responding to it. It's not just the elephant in the room, it's a very large mammoth.
Anne Green
Have your say by emailing letters@theneweuropean.co.uk. Our deadline for letters is Monday at 9am for inclusion in Thursdays edition. Please be concise - letters over five paragraphs long may be edited before printing.
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Brexit remains the elephant in the room in UK politics - The New European
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Brexit Supporting Wetherspoons Boss Now Wants Pub Workers from the EU – Eater London
Posted: at 7:37 pm
The predicted twin forces of the pandemic and Brexit are beginning to converge and manifest in an unprecedented staffing crisis in the London restaurant and wider hospitality industry, with Michelin-starred Le Gavroche chef-owner Michel Roux Junior announcing that a labour shortage has left him unable to open for lunch for the foreseeable future.
On Instagram, Roux Junior wrote that the past year has sadly taken a great toll on the hospitality industry and despite the relief felt by many whove been able to reopen their dining rooms, major problems remained. In this instance, Roux wrote, staffing.
Since opening, restaurants up and down the country have suffered greatly with staffing problems partly due to new Brexit regulations as well as there now being a major lack of well-trained hospitality professionals since the pandemic struck. Whilst we have been working our hardest to resolve this issue over the last couple of months, Le Gavroche is sadly understaffed for the time being.
Whilst it is incredibly frustrating and painful to report this, we have decided to open for dinner only from 5 p.m. starting from June 14th until further notice.
In a long message, Roux, who was in 2017 outed for short-changing his staff, later added that staff wellbeing is of utmost importance to us both mentally and physically and that the team was currently working tirelessly to ensure we can resume business as usual at the earliest opportunity.
While the pandemic might have delayed the effects of Brexit and bought business owners time, it has served to obscure the impact not prevent it. In the past fortnight, restaurateurs across the city have reported that trade is up and their restaurants are full but that the labour market is stretched and finding enough staff at the right level is currently not possible. Some have been warning about this crisis for years.
Elsewhere, at the other end of the spectrum and apparently without irony, to reignite the ire fire inside Remain ultras, Tim Martin, the Wetherspoons pub boss and Poster Boy of Brexit, has called for special visas for the EU citizens he requires to work in his massive pubs. Pubs that were formerly staffed in large numbers by EU citizens able to live and work freely in the U.K., but who, since the turn of the year, have not been able to do so because of Brexit, the project that the likes of Martin and his mullet hard-rallied behind for years. Yes, the pint-pulling-slightly-less-facist-Farage is among a number of voices in the formerly serious Daily Telegraph newspaper calling for a relaxation of work visa rules for EU migrants.
Martin said that a reasonably liberal immigration system controlled by the U.K. rather than the EU will boost the economy.
One former London restaurant worker who has recently relocated to Paris told Eater London that you could not make it up, mec.
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Brexit Supporting Wetherspoons Boss Now Wants Pub Workers from the EU - Eater London
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Facebook says Donald Trump to remain banned for two years, effective from Jan. 7 – CNBC
Posted: at 7:37 pm
Facebook on Friday announced that it may allow former President Donald Trump's Facebook and Instagram accounts to be reinstated in January 2023.
At that time, the social media company will reevaluate whether the risk to public safety of allowing Trump back onto its services has receded.
"We will evaluate external factors, including instances of violence, restrictions on peaceful assembly and other markers of civil unrest," the company said in a blog post. "If we determine that there is still a serious risk to public safety, we will extend the restriction for a set period of time and continue to re-evaluate until that risk has receded."
If Trump is allowed back on the service, there will be a strict set of rapidly escalating sanctions that will be triggered if Trump further violates the company's content moderation rules, Facebook said.
This two-year suspension will prevent Trump from using Facebook or Instagram to broadcast to his followers until after the 2022 U.S. midterm elections.
FacebooksuspendedTrump's accounts following the Jan. 6 insurrection on the U.S. Capitol. The decision was Facebook's most aggressive action against Trump during his four-year term.
Facebook referred the ban to its oversight board a few weeks later,sayingthat given the significance of the suspension, "we think it is important for the board to review it and reach an independent judgment on whether it should be upheld."
Facebook's independent Oversight Board in May decided to uphold the company's choice to suspend Trump's accounts. In its decision, however, the board noted that Facebook needed to reassess how it moderates the speech of political leaders, clearly outline those rules for the public and determine how long is appropriate for these users to be suspended.
The company said it determined that a two-year suspension was the appropriate length to allow a safe period of time after the acts of the Jan. 6 insurrection and it was a significant enough suspension to be a deterrent to Trump and others from repeating the violations in the future.
In a statement issued by his office, Trump criticized Facebook's decision, calling it an insult to his voters and falsely claiming that the 2020 presidential election was rigged.
"They shouldn't be allowed to get away with this censoring and silencing, and ultimately, we will win," Trump said in the statement. "Our Country can't take this abuse anymore!"
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Facebook says Donald Trump to remain banned for two years, effective from Jan. 7 - CNBC
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No, Donald Trump didnt win Texas by a lot in 2020; it was among the worst GOP victory margins in decades – The Dallas Morning News
Posted: at 7:37 pm
WASHINGTON Donald Trump falsely boasted during his campaign last fall that hed won Texas by a landslide in 2016, and on Saturday night, he told another whopper about his popularity in Texas this time about his performance in the 2020 campaign.
We won Texas by a lot, he claimed at a North Carolina GOP dinner.
Thats revisionist history, pure and simple.
Trump carried Texas in November by a margin of just 5.6 percentage points even worse than his 9-point margin in Texas over Hillary Clinton four years earlier.
Only two GOP nominees have won Texas by a smaller margin since 1976, when President Gerald Ford lost the state and the White House to Democrat Jimmy Carter, 51-48.
Trump also lagged other Republicans running statewide in November, notably Sen. John Cornyn, who topped MJ Hegar by 9.6 points. Railroad Commissioner Jim Wright won by nearly as much.
So, its not as though Trump had coattails in Texas to brag about last fall, either.
His Texas margin of victory did seem like a lot compared with early July polls, which showed a 5-point deficit. But that was Joe Bidens high point in Texas and he effectively abandoned the state to focus elsewhere.
Texas had not been a battleground in decades before Trumps anemic showing in 2016.
The single-digit victory margin put a scare into Republicans, who have no viable path to the White House without Texas because of Democratic dominance in California and New York.
Democrats smelled opportunity for the 2018 midterms, when Beto ORourke held Sen. Ted Cruz below 51%, the worst showing for any statewide Republican nominee since 1994.
As for the purported landslide over Clinton in 2016, Trump occasionally liked to make that claim, as he did while stumping in Ohio six weeks before Election Day last fall.
Theres no precise definition, but political scientists and campaign experts reserve the term landslide for an overwhelming victory, especially one that exceeds expectations and demoralizes the losing side.
A 9-point win is a comfortable margin. In 2016, Trump carried battlegrounds Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin by less than 1 point.
But in Texas, which still hasnt elected a Democrat statewide since 1994, its not a margin for a Republican presidential nominee to brag about.
Trumps 9-point win over Clinton was 7 points smaller than Mitt Romneys victory margin in Texas four years earlier and the lowest for a Republican nominee since Bob Doles 5-point squeaker in 1996 though both Romney and Dole lost despite the support from deep red Texas.
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Did Donald Trump Wear His Pants Backwards? Kris Kross Memes Have Already Begun – Yahoo Entertainment
Posted: at 7:37 pm
Donald Trump spoke in front of the Republican party in North Carolina on Saturday, rehashing his typical talking points and bashing President Joe Biden. But at the end of the night, his words werent what had social media buzzing it was his wrinkly, ill-fitting pants that quickly drew comparisons to Kris Kross and others.
Posting a clip of Trump moving away from the podium, one person honed in on that fact that there appeared to be no zipper on the front of his pants. Others are noting this, but it cant be shared enough: Donald Trump gave his big speech today with his pants on backwards, New York Daily News contributor Brandon Friedman wrote. Look close and tell me Im wrong.
For reference, here is the moment.
Others are noting this, but it can't be shared enough: Donald Trump gave his big speech today with his pants on backwards. Look close and tell me I'm wrong.pic.twitter.com/sRsoJVfyf8
Brandon Friedman (@BFriedmanDC) June 6, 2021
Almost immediately, the twice-impeached former President started getting roasted by Twitter users, most drawing comparisons to the 90s hip-hop duo Kris Kross.
Comprised of Chris Mac Daddy Kelly and Chris Daddy Mac Smith, Kris Kross were best known for their hit song Jump notably their debut single which topped the Billboard Hot 100 for eight weeks and was certified double platinum as a single.
But beyond their musical success, Kris Kross had an iconic fashion sense, always wearing their pants backwards (Chris Kelly maintained the look right up until he died at age 34).
Kris Kross will make ya, Trump Trump.
I hate myself.#TrumpSpeech pic.twitter.com/1ZuteBYhdf
Brian Guest (@brguest20) June 6, 2021
Want to feel old? This is what Kris Kross looks like today. pic.twitter.com/OAWxAnKKcc
Stephen Douglas (@Stephen_Douglas) June 6, 2021
Kriss Kross & DaddyMac were ahead of their time. https://t.co/ytCauiWFXX
Fr. Robert R. Ballecer, SJ (@padresj) June 6, 2021
Story continues
Others simply focused on the absurdity of the situation, poking fun at the idea that Trump perhaps just didnt notice the error. Just like everybody else he puts his pants on, no legs at a time, Keith Olbermann tweeted.
Just like everybody else he puts his pants on, no legs at a time https://t.co/rZ3FZQyHMI
Keith Olbermann (@KeithOlbermann) June 6, 2021
Just incredible that at no point did he go huh somethings a little off here as he zipped himself up on the ass
James Felton (@JimMFelton) June 6, 2021
I cant stop laughing https://t.co/tf5GsvpobZ
Rex Chapman (@RexChapman) June 6, 2021
Now, its entirely possible that Trumps choice in pants simply had an elastic waistband, or the lighting just made it seem like there was a lack of zipper. But folks on social media are going to have their fun in the meantime.
Others focused on the wrinkly appearance of the pants and recalled an account in former 2016 campaign aides Corey Lewandowski and David Bossies book that he made White House communications director Hope Hicks steam his pants while he wore them and once berated her for forgetting to bring the steaming machine during a campaign trip.
TFW you realize Hope Hicks was actually the most important member of your team pic.twitter.com/Q9WOIvoOGt
Don Moynihan (@donmoyn) June 6, 2021
Imagine waking up this morning as Hope Hicks and realizing youll be forever known as the pant steamer girl for the loon https://t.co/zJT06KkEQn
Lee Santos (@TxHopsfarmer) June 6, 2021
Loving this vintage mermaid skirt by Halston pic.twitter.com/rfNfBAGB3y
Randy Rainbow (@RandyRainbow) June 6, 2021
Read original story Did Donald Trump Wear His Pants Backwards? Kris Kross Memes Have Already Begun At TheWrap
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