Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
Boris Johnson with Donald Trump at a Nato summit in 2019.
Boris Johnson with Donald Trump at a Nato summit in 2019. Photograph: Peter Nicholls/AFP/Getty Images
Boris Johnson with Donald Trump at a Nato summit in 2019. Photograph: Peter Nicholls/AFP/Getty Images

Boris Johnson says Trump back in White House is ‘what the world needs’

This article is more than 3 months old

Ex-PM backs disgraced former US president ahead of election, saying he ‘won’t ditch the Ukrainians’

Boris Johnson has backed Donald Trump ahead of November’s US presidential election, saying his return to the White House could be “just what the world needs”.

In his weekly Daily Mail column, the former prime minister argued that if Trump backs Ukraine in its war against Russia, his renewed leadership “can be a big win for the world”.

However, Trump has repeatedly cast doubt on continued US support for Kyiv if he is re-elected, while boasting about his relationship with Russian president Vladimir Putin.

Trump, who has also repeatedly been openly critical of Nato, previously claimed that he could end Russia’s war on Ukraine in 24 hours.

Johnson wrote: “I simply cannot believe that Trump will ditch the Ukrainians; on the contrary, having worked out, as he surely has, that there is no deal to be done with Putin, I reckon there is a good chance that he will double down and finish what he started – by giving them what they need to win.

“If that is the case, then there is every chance, under Trump, that the west will be stronger, and the world more stable.”

Earlier on Friday the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, invited Trump, who is the frontrunner to get the Republican nomination, to visit Kyiv.

In an interview with Channel 4 News, the Ukrainian leader said: “Yes please, Donald Trump – I invite you to Ukraine.

“If you can stop the war during 24 hours I think it will be enough to come to Kyiv, on any day I am here.”

In his column, for which reports suggest the Daily Mail is paying him £1m a year, Johnson wrote that the “global wokerati” feared a Trump victory.

“In the cocktail parties of Davos, I am told, the global wokerati have been trembling so violently that you could hear the ice tinkling in their negronis,” he wrote.

skip past newsletter promotion

Elsewhere in his column, Johnson conceded that the former Republican president, who is facing 91 felony charges across four criminal cases, has “been caught saying a few unguarded things”.

Johnson claimed that “what the world needs now is a US leader whose willingness to use force and sheer unpredictability is a major deterrent to the enemies of the west”.

He also said that Trump is interested in “a proper free trade deal” with Britain, after hopes of a full-blown trade deal were abandoned last year.

PA Media contributed to this report

More on this story

More on this story

  • Boris Johnson ‘refused to be open’ with watchdog about hedge fund role

  • ‘Potentially serious impropriety’: Labour questions Johnson’s Venezuela meeting

  • Boris Johnson ‘held unofficial talks with president of Venezuela in February’

  • Boris Johnson withdrew from Tucker Carlson debate after Navalny death

  • ‘Boris bolt’: LBC bolted down guest seat to stop former PM dodging cameras

  • Six top politicians who exited Westminster via the ‘revolving door’

  • A Boris Johnson comeback is unlikely any time soon – but never say never

  • ‘He doesn’t want to face us’: Boris Johnson arrives at dawn, avoiding Covid inquiry families

  • Boris Johnson considered ‘raid’ on vaccine plant in the Netherlands

  • Sunak is ‘stooge’ put in place by Cummings, claims Johnson in Nadine Dorries book

Most viewed

Most viewed