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Tears for Keir: No Matter How Often Starmer Checks the Mail, There's No Inauguration Invite

AP Photo/Alex Brandon

There's an awful big party being planned for next Monday. All the best, most important people naturally expect to be invited and some will actually attend in person instead of sending a high-level representative.

Donald Trump, the 45th president of the United States, will be inaugurated as the 47th president of the United States, completing a political resurrection fairytale unlike anything we've seen in modern times.

Literally, rising from the ashes to soar back into the office on the back of a popular mandate so solid even the worst prophetic nightmares of his foes could never have forseen it.

It's going to be a party no one in his right mind who had a shot at going would ever want to miss unless you were such a sour, bile-filled, America-hating, ichellemay obamaway type, you stay home in a huff.

*yawn*

Oh, to be at a once-in-a-lifetime party like this. But a short one, granted, because Trump intends to hit the ground running.

So far, the guest list sounds eclectic and fun as the dickens, with all proper nods to world leaders and US strategic partners.

Meloni said 'yes.' Rock on.

Donald Trump's inauguration as the 47th President of the United States is expected to be a high-profile event, with several global leaders and influential figures confirming their attendance. The ceremony will take place on January 20 at the US Capitol, with proceedings starting at 12 pm ET (10:30 pm IST)

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni has received an official invitation and plans to attend the inauguration, pending confirmation of her schedule. Meloni, a populist and staunch conservative leader, has been a vocal supporter of Trump's policies and has sought to strengthen ties between Italy and the US.

The Chinese President Xi Jinping also received an invitation from Donald Trump, with spokesperson Karoline Leavitt highlighting the invitation as an example of Trump "creating an open dialogue with leaders of countries that are not just our allies but our adversaries and our competitors". However, Xi Jinping will send a high-level envoy to represent Beijing.

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban has also received an invitation to attend the inauguration, although he has yet to confirm his attendance. Orban, one of Trump's closest foreign allies, has been a key supporter of the president-elect's hard-right policies.

And look who's coming - Mr Personality himself.

...Argentine President Javier Milei will break tradition by attending the inauguration himself, rather than sending a representative.

What a hoot! Farage will be there, too, so it could get rowdy.

Brazil's Bolsonaro will be there if he can get his 'confiscated passport' back from the current regime. El Salvador's dynamic Nayib Bukele is expected and Japanese Foreign MinisterTakeshi Iwaya has said he'll be there, as they are 'anxious' to strengthen ties. The Indian External Affairs Minister will be there as the representative of his government, and the French are sending someone, too.

It's going to be a good crush.

Speaking of crush, I imagine there has to be a bit of that 'crushed' feeling at 10 Downing Street.

For all the 'special relationship,' nobody invited the Prime Minister of England. They didn't even show him the face-saving courtesy of being able to send his ambassador.

Frozen right out, Keir Starmer was.

Did Starmer think Trump wouldn't remember what Starmer, the Labour party leader, did during our recent election?

Or did he think for two seconds that Trump would forget how David Lammy, the now Foreign Secretary, characterized our president-elect in 2018...even though Lammy was desperately walking "woman-hating neo-Nazi sympathizing sociopath" back as hard as he could right after the November election and meeting Trump personally.

Did Starmer honestly think Trump wouldn't remember?

Oh, son - Pepperidge Farm remembers, and Donald Trump does too. All the 'special relationship' suck-up in the world can't change it.

The British delegation will be rehanging party frocks in closets and zipping the bags back up.

Yes, there's a helluva party, but for the first time...ever?...the British are not invited.

British political commentators are apoplectic that Starmer has already so poisoned the well that this huge snub - 'a massive stain on history' - would ever happen.

Now,  I do have to be completely transparent and tell you Trump is upending the way these things usually play out. Typically, inauguration 'invitations,' per se, don't get sent out. Trump has been reaching out personally to leaders this year, which, to my way of thinking, actually almost makes England being left off the list worse.

Donald Trump’s second inauguration as US President is set to take place on January 20, but it seems Sir Keir Starmer might have been snubbed.

This time around, Mr Trump is breaking with tradition by inviting foreign presidents and prime ministers to the event, which is not usually the case for US oath-taking ceremonies.

Reports indicate he has raised a record-breaking over $170 million (nearly £140 million) for the inauguration, with tech executives and major donors contributing large sums to support the ceremony.

This figure is also twice the $62 million secured by Joe Biden four years ago for his inauguration, which Trump did not attend. He became the fifth outgoing president not to attend his successor’s inauguration and the first in 152 years. Biden confirmed he would "of course" attend Trump’s presidential inauguration.

While the complete guest list has yet to be announced, several key global leaders have already been asked. Keir Starmer’s name, however, appears absent from the initial guest list.

Oh, the sting of being the only girl at the dance on the bench.

Or not even being at the dance because you weren't welcome.

So much for the Starmer 'special.'

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