Business
PM defends London Mayor Sadiq Khan against ‘ridiculous’ Trump claims
This post was originally published on this site.
Karl MercerLondon political editor
The prime minister has described claims from the US president that London wants “to go to Sharia law” as “ridiculous nonsense”.
Sir Keir Starmer also said he supported Mayor Sir Sadiq Khan following Donald Trump’s statement to the UN General Assembly in New York on Tuesday.
Trump had told the meeting that the city had a “terrible mayor” and had been “changed”.
He said: “Now they want to go to Sharia law. But you are in a different country, you can’t do that,” which Sir Sadiq said showed Trump was “racist, sexist, misogynistic and Islamophobic”.
Sir Keir said: “I’m not going to get drawn into a war of words, but what I will say is this, because it is important.
“You saw from the state visit last week that there are plenty of things on which the president and I agree, and we are working together.
“There are some issues on which we disagree, and what the president said about the mayor, who’s doing a really good job, in fact driving down serious crime, what he said about the introduction of Sharia law was ridiculous nonsense.
“I support our mayor, I’m really proud of the fact we have a Muslim mayor of a very diverse city.
“We do work with the Americans on a huge number of issues. On this issue I disagree, and I stand with our mayor.”
He added that he had spoken personally to Sir Sadiq about Trump’s claims.
Sir Sadiq added that he appeared to be “living rent-free inside Donald Trump’s head”.
Responding to the president calling him a “terrible mayor”, he said he was “thankful we have record numbers of Americans coming to London”.
He said different criteria showed London was “often the number one city on the globe when it comes to culture”.
Cabinet minister Pat McFadden rejected the claim that London wanted to “go to” Sharia and said British law and “no other kind of law” applied in the UK.
Earlier this month, justice minister Sarah Sackman told the House of Commons Sharia formed “no part of the law of England and Wales”.
“Where people choose to put themselves before those councils, in common with Christian, Jewish and other courts of faith, that is part of religious tolerance which is an important British value,” she said.
While religious courts, including Sharia councils, do operate in the UK, most of their work deals with religious marriage arbitration and financial matters.
The government has been clear that their rulings are not legally binding.
Business
Where Ryder Cup battle will be won and lost
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7 minutes ago
The past five Ryder Cups have ended in resounding victories for the home side.
Will Bethpage be any different this week as the US look to win back the trophy that Europe so convincingly regained in Rome?
While the bookmakers have the home side as slight favourites, there are a host of reasons why Europe are being tipped to win away for the first time since 2012.
Fast starts, blocking out the noise, experience and the Trump effect are among the key issues that will decide the outcome of this Ryder Cup, which gets under way on Friday.
2025 Ryder Cup
26-28 September
Bethpage Black, New York
Daily live text commentary and in-play clips on BBC Sport website from 11:30 BST. Radio commentary on BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Sounds from 12:00. Daily TV highlights on iPlayer from 00:00.
A fast start required
In the immediate aftermath of victory in Rome, Rory McIlroy called winning an away match “one of the toughest things to do in golf”.
On Thursday, he upped the ante a little more by saying that Europe have the chance this week to “go down as one of greatest Ryder Cup teams in history”.
And Friday’s opening session is likely to be pivotal in deciding the eventual winner.
In each of the past five events the overall victors have trounced the visitors in the first-day foursomes. Europe dropped only half a point out of 12 in these sequences in the triumphs of 2014, 2018 and 2023.
At Whistling Straits four years ago the US took the opening foursomes 3-1 en route to a record 19-9 victory. In 2016 they won the Friday foursomes session 4-0 at Hazeltine and Europe never truly recovered.
In the most recent away matches of 2016 and 2021, Europe trail 11½-4½ in foursomes. It feels as though they have to reverse this trend to have any chance this week.
It is the tone-setter for the three days of competition.
Overcoming the home advantage
A quick start is also vital because it could determine whether New York’s notoriously boisterous fans turn Bethpage into a “bear pit” from the playground it has been so far.
The build-up has been dominated by talk of how the home fans will treat the away players.
American Collin Morikawa said the atmosphere has been “tame” during the practice days, with lots of autograph-hunting kids admitted for free. He is hoping for “absolute chaos” come Friday.
Keeping the fans subdued will be high on Europe’s agenda.
The US won by 10 points in 2021’s ‘walloping in Wisconsin’, with the home supporters celebrating victory as early as midway through the second of the three day’s play, emboldened by Justin Thomas’ beer-swilling, can-throwing antics on the first tee.
Last time out, the stands that towered over the first tee in Rome proved too intimidating for the American players. They failed to win the opening hole in any of the first dozen matches as Europe romped to an early lead they wouldn’t relinquish.
As at Whistling Straits four years ago, the visitors have been on a charm offensive, signing thousands of autographs and posing for selfies but they know the noise will be turned up come game day.
European captain Luke Donald dished out virtual reality headsets, which could be programmed with all manner of abuse, to his players. A gimmick perhaps but if it provides a marginal gain for one player it will have been deemed worth it.
The Europeans have all talked down the impact of the crowd, Robert MacIntyre alluded to controlling the controllables and in a mantra oft repeated by his team-mates, simply said “it’s my job to play good golf”.
Justin Rose knows the importance of getting European blue on the board, having been a key member of the last team to win away in 2012 – the famed ‘Miracle at Medinah’ when Europe recovered from 10-4 down late on the Saturday, to win 14.5-13.5.
“As soon as we were able to flip the script, the crowd did change, they did go quiet,” he told BBC Sport.
“They didn’t like it and that’s going to be our goal, to pacify the crowd.”
Donald v Bradley
Luke Donald does not lose Ryder Cups. As a player, he played four, won four. As a captain, led one, won one.
The experience of winning in Rome has laid the perfect foundation for this week. His build-up has appeared calm, helped by having the benefit of a settled team, with just one new face among his dozen in Rasmus Hojgaard replacing his twin brother Nicolai from Rome.
And he has been on script with his messaging here in New York, delivering his thoughts in an assured manner, with perhaps just one sly dig at the Americans being paid for the first time at a Ryder Cup during his opening ceremony speech.
His opposing number has had a more cluttered countdown. A little more than a year ago Keegan Bradley admitted he was as surprised as anyone when he was asked to lead the side in the wake of Tiger Woods turning down the captaincy.
Most of the following 12 months was spent debating whether he would select himself as the first player-captain since Arnold Palmer in 1963. Eventually sense prevailed and Bradley, who finished 11th on the US qualifying list, opted to focus solely on the leadership role.
But he then fumbled his opening ceremony speech on Wednesday. “I was 13 years old, perched on my dad’s shoulders, watching Justin Rose’s miracle putt drop on 17,” he said, intending to refer to Justin Leonard’s infamous putt at 1999’s ‘Battle of Brookline’ and the ensuing controversial celebrations, despite Jose Maria Olazabal having a chance to halve the hole.
A sign of nerves?
Rory McIlroy was not going to miss an open goal, telling BBC Sport on Wednesday that when they returned to the team room after the opening ceremony “we got Justin Rose to apologise to Jose Maria for running all over his line at Brookline”.
Experience to count?
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Europe certainly have the advantage in terms of playing experience, with 32 appearances between their dozen, compared with 15 for the US.
Naturally, Europe’s players have won more points too, leading 68½-30 in that category.
McIlroy and Justin Rose are Europe’s veterans and are the only two players to have won away – although Donald was also on that team at Medinah in 2012.
Between them they have amassed 33½ points from 13 combined appearances and both arrived in New York on the back of excellent years.
McIlroy became just the sixth player to complete the career Grand Slam by winning the Masters in April, while Rose, beaten in a play-off at Augusta by his team-mate, won a PGA Tour title in August
Rose missed Whistling Straits but Tommy Fleetwood, Jon Rahm, Tyrrell Hatton, Matt Fitzpatrick and Shane Lowry are all returning for a second tilt on US soil.
Fleetwood said “all of us on that team didn’t feel like we did ourselves justice” and it was a huge motivating factor for Rome.
But that works both ways and he pointed out the US players will “have been hurt from last time”, adding “they’ll want to win in front of their home crowd, and that’s just as it should be”.
Scottie Scheffler is clearly the standout player for the Americans. The runaway world number one, has had another outstanding year, with two more major titles – the US PGA and Open Championship – among his six victories.
However, Sir Nick Faldo is adamant that Scheffler will be the only player Europe will fear this week.
“Scottie will be a target because he’s meant to win,” Faldo told BBC Sport. “If you just get a half point against him, that’s a victory. The rest don’t scare me.”
Scheffler went unbeaten as a rookie at Whistling Straits in 2021, but was reduced to tears in Rome after he and Brooks Koepka suffered a record 9&7 defeat at the hands of Viktor Hovland and Ludvig Aberg – both of whom return this week.
Justin Thomas and Patrick Cantlay may have something to say about Faldo’s comments though, given they have the best Ryder Cup records on the US team.
Thomas, who has eight points from 13 matches, was chief cheerleader in 2021, while Cantlay was the pantomime villain in Rome with ‘cap-gate’ and his caddie’s spat with McIlroy. But he has won five of his eight matches.
The Trump effect
Given he is a huge fan of the sport, it is not surprising that US President Donald Trump will be on site on Friday.
Fans, media and volunteers alike are all being urged to get to the course early because security will be super-tight and organisers are keen to avoid the disruption that was caused by Trump’s visit to the US Open men’s tennis final earlier this month.
“I hope he will inspire us to victory,” said Bryson DeChambeau, who has played with Trump.
“I think he’ll be a great force for us to get a lot of people on our side. It will be interesting and exciting to see how the crowd and everybody reacts.
“It’s going to be an electric environment.”
Business
Trump urges Turkey to stop buying Russian oil as Erdogan chases deal on F-35s
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US President Donald Trump has urged Turkey to stop buying oil from Russia, part of a wider drive to cut off Moscow’s energy funding as the war in Ukraine rages on.
Speaking alongside President Recep Tayyip Erdogan at the White House, Trump said halting those imports would be “the best thing” his Turkish counterpart could do.
The Oval Office meeting ended without any firm commitments to lift US sanctions on Turkey or sell advanced F-35 fighter jets, although Trump expressed optimism about both issues.
Turkey has for years been prevented from buying US F-35s. In 2019 it was expelled from a programme where it produced parts for the warplane after it acquired air defence systems from Russia.
During a brief question-and-answer session alongside Erdogan in the Oval Office on Thursday, Trump said he would like Turkey to stop “buying any oil from Russia while Russia continues its rampage against Ukraine”.
“The best thing he could do is not buy oil and gas from Russia,” Trump said. “If he did that, that would be the best thing.”
Trump added that he believes Erdogan is respected both by Ukrainian President Volodomyr Zelensky and Russian President Vladimir Putin, meaning that he could “have a big influence” on the war “if he wants to”.
Alongside India and China, Turkey is among Moscow’s biggest customers for oil and gas exports, and data shows that the volume of Russian gas that reached Europe through Turkey rose by over 26% earlier this year.
The US president’s comments come just weeks after he said he stood poised to impose tougher sanctions on Russia if Nato countries met conditions that included halting imports of Russian oil.
Earlier this week – during a lengthy speech at the UN General Assembly – Trump also accused Nato allies of “funding the war against themselves” through their purchases of energy from Moscow.
During Trump’s first term in office, the US removed Turkey from the F-35 programme after it purchased S-400 surface-to-air missile systems from Russia.
A US defence bill passed in 2020 included an amendment that prevented Turkey from acquiring F-35s, unless – and only if – the US government is able to certify that it has given up on the Russian S-400.
Some US lawmakers have expressed concerns about the potential sale over Turkish military incursions into Syria and past violations of Greek airspace.
Earlier this week, the bipartisan Hellenic Caucus in the US Congress warned against allowing Turkey to buy F-35s, citing its military co-operation with Russia and a “disregard for international norms and democratic principles”.
In the Oval Office, however, Trump told Erdogan that he would “be successful” with buying the things he would “like to buy”.
“He needs certain things, and we need certain things,” he said. “And we’re going to come to a conclusion. You’ll know by the end of the day.”
In an interview with Fox News on Monday, Erdogan said of the F-35 ban: “I don’t think it is very becoming of a strategic partnership.”
Trump also said that sanctions against Turkey – implemented in 2020 following the S-400 purchase – could be lifted “very soon”.
“If we have a good meeting, almost immediately”, he added.
The meeting between Trump and Erdogan is their second this week, following a brief discussion they had about Gaza at the UN General Assembly, alongside leaders from several Arab and Muslim nations.
In his interview with Fox, Erdogan also accused US ally Israel of committing a “complete genocide” in Gaza and blamed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu – a position starkly different from Trump’s public remarks.
In the Oval Office on Thursday, however, the US and Turkish presidents avoided public disagreement on the issue. Israel denies it is committing genocide in Gaza.
Breaking News
Barack Obama spread hope of ‘brighter days ahead’ as he became a freeman of Dublin
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Fourteen years ago, US president Barack Obama stepped on stage at Dublin’s College Green to a rapturous reception. The 60,000 crowd had been worked up to hysterical levels of excitement by warm-up acts including Westlife and Jedward, and sports figures Brian O’Driscoll and Katie Taylor, as well as Taoiseach Enda Kenny.
On Thursday, Mr Obama was back in town to receive the Freedom of the city of Dublin. He was greeted by Lord Mayor Ray McAdam, seven other city councillors, Minister for Finance Paschal Donohoe and former Taoiseach Brian Cowen. Also in attendance was former Lord Mayor Brendan Carr, who proposed Mr Obama for the honour eight years ago, as well as city council chief executive Richard Shakespeare and a small number of other officials and dignitaries.
The ceremony, attended by a crowd of about 30, was held in the Constitution room of the Shelbourne Hotel opposite St Stephen’s Green, the park where Mr Obama now has the right to graze sheep. Neither the media nor the general public were permitted to attend.
The former US president was presented with a copy of the first American edition of Ulysses and a bottle of whiskey. He signed the official scroll, making him a freeman of Dublin. According to one or two of those present, he said a few words referencing the “challenging times” the world was facing, and the need for “hope” that there would be “brighter days ahead”.
He stood for some photos, shook hands, told Green Party councillor Janet Horner she looked very young to be a politician (she was delighted) and the whole event was done and dusted in about half an hour.
Afterwards, Cllr Horner said Mr Obama was “very warm”, while Social Democrats councillor Cat O’Driscoll said the ceremony was “quite nice” and “an uplifting occasion”.
Cllr McAdam said it was a privilege to have the opportunity to award Mr Obama the Freedom of Dublin, saying the former president had shown that words coupled with convictions “could still move mountains”. Cllr McAdam reflected on the words of Beckett: “Better hope deferred than none”.
Groups leaders of each party on the council were invited to the ceremony, but Sinn Féin, People Before Profit and the Independent group declined to attend.
The Independent group said it was boycotting the event due to Mr Obama’s foreign policy regime in office, including his support of Israel “despite its war crimes in Gaza and relentless settlement expansion”.
About 50 people gathered outside the Shelbourne Hotel during the ceremony, some expressing similar sentiments.
Mark Price of the Irish Anti War Movement said he was there to “protest Barack Obama’s visit to Dublin”.
“He’s been an absolute operative for the American empire and we should not be [giving] him the Freedom of the city of Dublin, in my opinion,” he said.
“He might have made some statements early in his presidency about Guantanamo Bay and Palestine and so on, but in practice, he vastly increased instability through drone warfare in Afghanistan and Pakistan and through escalating the Ukraine situation in 2014.”
However, most shared positive sentiments. Danielle Bochneak, from Obama’s hometown of Chicago, who has been living in Ireland for two years, recalled meeting him on the night he secured his first presidential term in 2008. “It was just a handshake, but he makes a connection with everyone that he comes in contact with . . . so that was really incredible.”
Asked why she came to the Shelbourne on Thursday afternoon, she said: “I miss him. We are lacking the civility that president Obama and Michelle Obama bring to the White House, so I really wanted to see them again.”
Terri McClain, from Seattle, wearing an “I heart Obama” t-shirt, said she flew to Dublin to attend Obama’s public interview with Fintan O’Toole, which will take place in the 3Arena on Friday evening.
“We all miss him in the States and what’s happening now is not a good thing,” she said. “God bless president Obama, he’s a good person and I support him all the time.”
Sylvia Jones from Dublin and Dave Quinn from Limerick joined the crowd at the Shelbourne “to support Obama”.
Wearing a shirt that read “Trump Not Welcome”, Ms Jones said she is “wishing for better times, the good times when [Obama] was in power, not this absolute disaster that’s happening at the moment”.
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