logo
Trump didn't push me to support new oil and gas drilling, Swinney says

Trump didn't push me to support new oil and gas drilling, Swinney says

The SNP leader said the US President made his views clear during their dinner on Monday but did not actively press him to back fresh drilling in the North Sea.
Mr Swinney said he was aware of Mr Trump's posts on his social media platform urging the UK to lower taxes and drill.
US President Donald Trump played some golf at Trump International Golf Links, on the Menie Estate in Balmedie, Aberdeenshire (Jane Barlow/PA)
On the last day of his five-day visit to Scotland, the American leader posted: 'North Sea Oil is a treasure chest for the United Kingdom.
'The taxes are so high, however, that it makes no sense.
'They have essentially told drillers and oil companies that, 'we don't want you'.
'Incentivize the drillers, fast. A vast fortune to be made for the UK, and far lower energy costs for the people!'
Mr Swinney had dinner with the President who was flanked at the table at Trump MacLeod House & Lodge – named after Mr Trump's Scottish mother, Mary Anne MacLeod Trump – in the Menie estate alongside Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer.
Asked if the President pressed Mr Swinney to back new oil and gas licenses during the two-hour event, the First Minister said: 'He didn't. He didn't press me to do that.
Trump had dinner with Keir Starmer and John Swinney on Monday evening (Jane Barlow/PA)
'He obviously expressed his view that there should be more oil and gas activity undertaken and I've seen material from the President this morning which raises issues about taxation, which of course, is not under my control.
'I don't have any influence over North Sea oil and gas taxation.
'Obviously the President made clear his view that he is not a supporter of wind turbines and I expressed the view that we have about our energy priorities on renewable energy.'
Mr Trump landed in Prestwick on Friday on Air Force One before travelling to his golf course in Turnberry, South Ayrshire.
On Monday, he and the Prime Minister were transported by Marine One to his golf course in Menie.
He opened up The New Course there on Tuesday shortly before leaving for Washington.
Mr Swinney had dinner with Mr Trump for around two hours where the First Minister made the case for exempting Scotch whisky from US tariffs, while a shorter discussion on Tuesday morning focused on what Mr Swinney said was the 'humanitarian catastrophe' in Gaza.
During his trip – his first since 2023 and first since winning re-election – Mr Trump repeatedly referred to Aberdeen as 'the oil capital of Europe'.
The US President campaigned on 'drill baby drill' during his election campaign last year.
He has been outspoken in his dislike of 'windmills', having taken the Scottish Government to court over an offshore wind farm near his Aberdeenshire estate.
Mr Trump said Scotland had the 'ugliest windmills I've ever seen', describing them as 'ugly monsters' that were 'destroying the beauty' of the country.
Donald Trump has urged the UK to extract more oil from the North Sea (Andrew Milligan/PA)
'Wind is a disaster,' Mr Trump said. 'Wind is the most expensive form of energy.
'When we go to Aberdeen you'll see some of the ugliest windmills you've ever seen.
'They're the height of a 50-storey building.
'You could take 1,000 times more energy from a hole in the ground. It's called oil and gas, and you have it in the North Sea.
'You are paying in Scotland, and the UK, and all over place, where they gave them massive subsidies to have these ugly monsters all over the place.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Watch moment huge mushroom cloud erupts over Russian plant after massive Ukrainian strike in major blow to Putin
Watch moment huge mushroom cloud erupts over Russian plant after massive Ukrainian strike in major blow to Putin

The Sun

timea few seconds ago

  • The Sun

Watch moment huge mushroom cloud erupts over Russian plant after massive Ukrainian strike in major blow to Putin

THIS is the jaw-dropping moment when a huge fireball erupted over a Russian oil refinery during Ukrainian drone strikes. The vast mushroom cloud rose over the military-linked Novokuybyshevsk refinery in Russia's Samara region. 8 8 8 8 8 This plant supplies aviation fuel for Putin's combat aircraft, which have been used in barbaric attacks against Ukrainian civilians. Stunning footage shows flames erupting high into the air, engulfing the facility in a bright orange inferno. Ukrainian Telegram channel Exilenova+ claimed the attack led to fire surging 590ft into the sky. But, in a major blow to Vlad's war machine, it is just one of several blazes reported at strategic sites across Russia. Elsewhere, another oil refinery was set alight in Ryazan - which is a critical supplier for the Russian capital Moscow. Fires were also reported at a military airfield Primorsko-Akhtarsk in the Krasnodar region - which is used for Russia's brutal drone strikes against Ukraine. A "major hit" was further reported on a Russian air defence radar company in occupied Crimea. One woman died in drone strikes on the Electropribor plant in Penza city - which makes special-purpose telecoms and cryptographic equipment to support Putin's war machine. As many as eight massive explosions were heard in the city during the drone strikes, according to reports. Ukrainian forces also reportedly hit military targets in the Rostov region, leading to one death. It comes as Russia continues to brutally bombard civilian targets in Ukraine. A total of 31 people died, including five children, after Putin's forces fired an Iskander missile into a residential tower block in Kyiv. Devastating Russian strikes against civilian targets have also been reported in the Kharkiv, Donetsk and Dnipropetrovsk regions over the past week. It comes after Donald Trump ordered two nuclear submarines be positioned near Russia. The US President's patience with Putin has worn thin in recent weeks over the Russian tyrant's unwillingness to agree to a ceasefire. He also slashed his 50 day deadline for a peace deal down to "10 to 12" days - towards the end of next week. One of Putin's cronies hit back at Trump following this move, accusing him of fanning the flames of war. Ex-Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said: "Each new ultimatum is a threat and a step towards war. "Not between Russia and Ukraine, but with his own country. Don't go down the Sleepy Joe road!" But Trump slammed Medvedev's comments as "foolish and inflammatory" as he ordered for the submarines to be sent out. "We always want to be ready, and so I have sent to the region two nuclear submarines," Trump said. "I just want to make sure that his words are only words and nothing more than that." He added: "A threat was made by a former president of Russia and we're going to protect our people." 8 8 8

Neo-Nazi group is quietly buying up land across the UK in a bid to create white-only enclaves
Neo-Nazi group is quietly buying up land across the UK in a bid to create white-only enclaves

Daily Mail​

timea few seconds ago

  • Daily Mail​

Neo-Nazi group is quietly buying up land across the UK in a bid to create white-only enclaves

A neo-Nazi group is quietly buying up land across the UK in a bid to create white-only enclaves, The Mail on Sunday can reveal. The Woodlander Initiative (TWI) has already purchased more than 20 acres of land in four different locations and plans to buy up plots in every county in the UK to establish 'white heartlands'. The fascist land-buying scheme owns a large plot of land near a secluded village in rural Wales that has been used by Britain's largest fascist group to host 'camping' and training weekends. The group has raised more than £160,000 from far-Right donors and recently bought a section of woodland near Rye in an attempt to establish a white-only enclave in the East Sussex town. Experts say that owning large swathes of land has been a longstanding ambition of the British far-Right and described it as 'concerning' that Woodlander has been able to do so under the radar. TWI is run by former BNP and National Front member Simon Birkett who is now linked to Britain's largest neo-Nazi group - Patriotic Alternative (PA) - and was a speaker at its last annual conference. In a recent article for TWI members Birkett invoked conspiracy theories including the 'Great Replacement' and said that Woodlander is part of attempts to 'create an elite, a vanguard, an alternative group who will actively do what's best for us'. PA leader Mark Collett - a former British National Party official - has repeatedly championed the land-buying scheme and his activists have camped on the TWI land in Wales. Writing in the neo-Nazi magazine Heritage and Destiny, Collett described TWI as 'a fantastic initiative that allows nationalists to pool their money in order to purchase land and property'. 'This is a long-term plan that will hopefully catch on and turn into the establishment of indigenous heartlands; places for our people,' he wrote. Dr William Allchorn, a senior research fellow at Anglia Ruskin University who is an expert on the British far-Right, said that buying land is part of a broader strategy for fascist groups. 'It's the idea of creating a separate white heartland or parallel society where they can be completely off grid,' he said. 'This is worrying because while these camps can look fairly innocuous they involve things like paramilitary training or training in martial arts.' Dr Allchorn said it was concerning that TWI appears to have 'progressed fairly far' and that it has parallels with groups in the United States, East Germany and South Africa where 'neo-Nazis have been buying up land in order to create white-exclusive towns or communities that live in the style of the Nazi past'. He said that British far-Right groups had previously 'flirted' with buying land but had largely been focussed on trying to enter electoral politics, but their focus has shifted since the pandemic. 'They view this as a key moment,' Dr Allchorn said. 'If they can find land or they can find a place to build this enclave, it fits neatly with the broader ideological vision which all far-Right groups are aiming towards, which is the erasure and exclusion of minorities and migrants.' Woodlander has purchased land near the village of Llanafan Fawr, in mid Wales, and recently bought three and a half acres of woodland near the village of Beckley, East Sussex. It is also planning to buy land near Alston, Cumbria, and advertised this to PA members in an attempt to raise cash to build 'villages' exclusively for white Britons. In a video posted earlier this month Birkett spoke of 'building a village' for TWI members and on its website TWI says its plan is to 'take back control of our land, our freedoms and our future' for 'British people as a distinct group comprising of the English, Welsh, Scots and Irish'.

Donald Trump says US nuclear attack submarines are now 'closer to Russia' after he re-deployed them over Kremlin's 'foolish and inflammatory' taunts
Donald Trump says US nuclear attack submarines are now 'closer to Russia' after he re-deployed them over Kremlin's 'foolish and inflammatory' taunts

Daily Mail​

time30 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Donald Trump says US nuclear attack submarines are now 'closer to Russia' after he re-deployed them over Kremlin's 'foolish and inflammatory' taunts

Donald Trump has revealed that a pair of US nuclear submarines 'are moving closer' to Russia after he deployed them in response to an escalating war of words with former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev. The move of the nuclear submarines to 'appropriate regions', which the US President described as a 'terrible situation', appeared to be symbolic – the U.S. already has a fleet of dozens of nuclear-powered subs that are constantly ready to strike in the event of a conflict. But tensions notched up another level as Trump admitted they were getting closer. 'They are closer to Russia yeah, it's a terrible situation,' he told Newsmax. It increases the tension once again after Trump announced he was moving up his ultimatum for Russia to agree to end the war. 'We had to do that. We just have to be careful. And a threat was made and we didn't think it was appropriate. So I have to be very careful,' Trump told reporters as he left the White House on Friday for a weekend at his New Jersey golf club. 'A threat was made by a former president of Russia, and we're going to protect our people,' he added. If Russia fails to strike a peace deal by the end of next week, Trump said he will impose punishing 'secondary sanctions' on nations who trade with Russia. Trump made the decision to deploy the submarines after 'highly provocative statements' of Russia's ex-President Dmitry Medvedev - who now serves as deputy of Russia's Security Council. The United States has a total of 14 Ohio Class nuclear-powered submarines, each capable of carrying up to 24 Trident II D5 ballistic missiles that can deliver multiple thermonuclear warheads up to 4,600 miles. Between 8 and 10 Ohio Class submarines are deployed at any one time, according to the Nuclear Threat Initiative arms control group. Medvedev had called Trump's sanctions threat a clear 'step toward war,' clearly incensing the president. 'I have ordered two nuclear submarines to be positioned in the appropriate regions, just in case these foolish and inflammatory statements are more than just that,' Trump wrote on Truth Social on Friday afternoon. 'Words are very important, and can often lead to unintended consequences, I hope this will not be one of those instances. Thank you for your attention to this matter!' Medvedev, the former president of Russia who stepped aside when Vladimir Putin took a break from the top post, drew Trump's ire with his own post this week. 'Trump's playing the ultimatum game with Russia…Each new ultimatum is a threat and a step towards war. Not between Russia and Ukraine, but with his own country. Don't go down the Sleepy Joe road!' he wrote. The United States has a total of 14 Ohio Class nuclear-powered submarines, each capable of carrying up to 24 Trident II D5 ballistic missiles Trump then tore into the Russian with angry posts around midnight Thursday. 'Tell Medvedev, the failed former President of Russia, who thinks he's still President, to watch his words. He's entering very dangerous territory,' Trump wrote. Trump's jabs at Medvedev, who is often a caustic critic of U.S. policy, allows him to steer clear of Putin – with whom Trump has shown obvious frustration in recent weeks, despite Trump often referring him to him as someone he can 'get along with.' Trump has lamented apparently positive phone conversations with Putin followed within hours by Russian attacks on Ukrainian cities and towns. Trump's threats come after Russia launched yet another devastating attack on Kyiv overnight, which killed dozens of people and a six-year-old boy. Russia has routinely been sending swarms of hundreds of drones to attack Ukraine, with houses and apartment buildings suffering regular blasts. An estimated 31 people were killed and 150 injured during Thursday's attacks. Wrote Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in response while posting a video: 'Kyiv. Missile strike. Directly into a residential building. People under the rubble. All services are on site. Russian terrorists.' 'All disappointments come from inflated expectations,' said Russian President Vladimir Putin Friday in response to Trump's expedited deadline issued Monday In his own first public comments since Trump threw down his abbreviated ultimatum, Putin criticized 'inflated' expectations about ending a war he ordered in 2022 by launching a cross-border attack on Russia's neighbor. 'All disappointments come from inflated expectations,' Putin said. 'In order to solve the issue in a peaceful way, we need deep conversations, not in public, but in the silence of a negotiating process.' Trump's reference to nuclear subs suggests both their stealth and massive firepower. Each of the 14 Ohio-class ballistic missile subs carries up to 20 Trident II missiles, with a range of up to 7,500 miles and up to eight nuclear warheads, with 160 warheads in total. The warheads are capable of causing a 475-kiloton explosion, vastly more powerful than the bomb dropped on Hiroshima in 1945. Trump said last month at the White House while meeting with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte that first lady Melania Trump had taken to raising the issue of the toll on civilians. 'I go home, I tell the first lady, "You know, I spoke to Vladimir today. We had a wonderful conversation." And she said, "Oh really? Another city was just hit,"' Trump told reporters. Those comments coincided with an increasingly tough verbal posture on Putin from the president, who has now threatened to slap new sanctions on Russia as well as its trading partners. Just weeks ago, the Pentagon had imposed a temporary freeze on arms transfers to Ukraine, reflecting a move in Trump's administration away from the pro-Ukraine position of President Biden's, which shoveled billions of military aid to Kyiv after Moscow's invasion. Trump and his team, meanwhile, have been fighting a rhetorical battle over a 2017 intelligence assessment that Russia preferred Trump in the 2016 elections.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store