
Police Scotland 'on notice' for visit from JD Vance
Vance is currently holidaying in the Cotswolds but travelled to the Foreign Secretary's Chevening House retreat in Kent on Friday, where the Republican joined David Lammy carp fishing at the countryside estate.
JD Vance and David Lammy (Image: PA) A Police Scotland spokesperson said: 'Planning is under way for a potential visit to Scotland by the vice president of the United States.
'Details of any visit would be for the White House to comment on, however, it is important that we prepare in advance for what would be a significant policing operation.'
READ MORE: Nicola Sturgeon 'felt like disappearing into North Sea after arrest', excerpt reveals
Vance and his family are thought to be planning a visit to Ayrshire but would not stay at Trump's Turnberry resort, according to Sky News.
In Kent, Vance said he had a 'love' for the UK but joked he had committed a diplomatic faux pas as he began his holiday.
'Unfortunately, the one strain on the special relationship is that all of my kids caught fish, but the Foreign Secretary did not,' he said.
He described Lammy as a 'very, very gracious host'.
Trump's visit to Scotland ended less than two weeks ago, after he met with both Starmer and First Minister John Swinney.

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Telegraph
33 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Neither Russia nor Ukraine will be happy with peace plan, US warns
Neither Russia nor Ukraine will be happy with the peace deal proposed to end the war, the United States has warned. As the shape of negotiations started to emerge on Sunday, JD Vance, the US vice-president, admitted that neither side would be content with the terms of the agreement, aimed at bringing an end to the three-year conflict. Mr Vance appeared to suggest that the current front lines would be frozen and territory exchanged to bring about an end to the war. 'Both the Russians and the Ukrainians, probably, at the end of the day, are going to be unhappy with it,' he told Fox News. Vladimir Putin will travel to Alaska on Friday for a meeting with Donald Trump, marking a potential breakthrough. The White House is yet to rule out inviting Volodymyr Zelensky, the Ukrainian president, to the summit. His absence has sparked fears that Kyiv could be cut out from negotiations and have a one-sided deal forced upon it. European leaders, including Mr Zelensky, appear to be on a collision course with Mr Trump, who has suggested an end to the fighting could involve 'some swapping of territories'. A joint statement by France, Italy, Germany, Poland, the UK and the European Commission said: 'The path to peace in Ukraine cannot be decided without Ukraine. We remain committed to the principle that international borders must not be changed by force.' But the US position started to emerge in more detail on Sunday 'It's actually very simple. If you take where the current line of contact between Russia and Ukraine is, we're going to try to find some negotiated settlement that the Ukrainians and the Russians can live with, where they can live in relative peace, where the killing stops, it's not going to make anybody super happy,' Mr Vance said. Mr Zelensky is steadfastly opposed to giving away any territory, vowing to reject any deal that cedes his country's borders. He insisted that 'Ukrainians will not give their land to occupiers'. Currently, Russia controls around 20 per cent of Ukraine's sovereign territory, including all of Crimea and most of the Kherson, Zaporizhzhia, Donetsk and Luhansk regions. Putin's visit to Alaska will be his first visit to the US since meeting Barack Obama at a UN summit in New York in September 2015. The location of the summit, in a state whose closest point to Russia across the Bering Strait is only three miles away, has added to fears that a peace agreement will be favourable to Putin. While European leaders pressed for Mr Zelensky's attendance, the Ukrainian president wrote on X: 'The end of the war must be fair, and I am grateful to everyone who stands with Ukraine and our people today for the sake of peace in Ukraine, which is defending the vital security interests of our European nations.' UK Government sources told The Telegraph that it was unlikely that a European delegation would attend the Alaska summit, but acknowledged that plans could change this week. Allies are concerned that they will not have enough input on Mr Trump's proposals at the summit with Putin, given divergent views between the White House and European capitals on how to end the war. It is understood that Sir Keir Starmer will continue calls with European counterparts this week in an attempt to establish a united position on the conflict, and it is possible a full meeting of Sir Keir, Emmanuel Macron and other European leaders will take place before Mr Trump heads to Alaska. 'We hope and assume that the government of Ukraine, that President Zelensky will be involved in this meeting,' Friedrich Merz , the chancellor of Germany, said in an interview with broadcaster ARD. He said Berlin was working closely with Washington to try to ensure Mr Zelensky's attendance at the talks, adding: 'We cannot accept in any case that territorial questions are discussed or even decided between Russia and America over the heads of Europeans and Ukrainians. I assume that the American government sees it the same way. 'We hope that there will be a breakthrough on Friday. Above all, that there will finally be a ceasefire and that there can be peace negotiations in Ukraine.'

South Wales Argus
39 minutes ago
- South Wales Argus
Proscribing Palestine Action has 'empowered' far-right, say protesters
An organiser of the Friends of Al-Mawasi group, based in Hastings, East Sussex, said the UK Government has 'empowered' extremists by trying to 'demonise' Palestine supporters. In July, Hastings Borough Council passed a motion to back an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, an end to all arms sales to Israel and to support the town's friendship links with the people of Al-Mawasi – a section of the Gaza Strip. Last month, at a fundraising walk, there were multiple alleged incidents of verbal and physical abuse from counter-protesters which were reported to the police. A woman, waiting for the demonstrators at De La Warr Pavilion in Bexhill, was pushed to the ground and called a 'f****** terrorist' for wearing a keffiyeh, while a Jewish man, whose father escaped the Holocaust, was repeatedly called a Nazi by Israel supporters. Both incidents were reported to Sussex Police after the walk on July 20. On Sunday, roughly 100 protesters ran a second fundraising walk from Hastings beach along the coast to Bexhill 'in defiance' of the abuse. The Friends of Al Mawasi group marched from Hastings beach to Bexhill in 'defiance' of the abuse received on the previous protest (PA/Stanley Murphy-Johns) Grace Lally, who helped set up the group and campaigned for the town to twin with Al-Mawasi, believes there is a 'clear link' between the Government action and the abuse. She said: 'Those extremists have been empowered by a Government that says, people supporting Palestine are terrorists, d'you know what I mean?' Ms Lally added: 'The reason it's being challenged in the court and the reason the court has given permission for a judicial review to be held is because of the chilling effect of that ruling which blurs the line between protest and terrorism.' She said it did not matter that the Government had only proscribed Palestine Action rather than all protesters. 'That (the decision) I think has emboldened people on the far-right, extremists, to sort of see anyone who's supporting Palestine as a legitimate target,' Ms Lally said. On Saturday, more than 500 people were arrested in central London for showing support for Palestine Action. Richard Wistreich, a member of Jews for Justice Hastings, was one of the demonstrators who faced abuse in the July fundraising march. He told the PA news agency that cars had parked on their route to Bexhill, with a couple of people waving Israeli flags and shouting abuse as the protesters passed by. Mr Wistreich, whose father escaped Poland in the late 1930s, said: 'At one point one of them got out of the car and saw my T-shirt, which made it quite clear that I am proclaiming myself to be Jewish. 'So I was then very loudly told that I was not a Jew and in fact I was a Nazi, in a very, very aggressive manner.' The woman wearing the keffiyeh, who wishes to remain anonymous, said a man approached her on the pavilion aggressively and said 'that scarf', which she ignored. She said: 'I wasn't responding to him at all because he looked so angry and then he went 'you're a f****** terrorist' and then he proceeded to grab the scarf and pull me close to him.' The woman said she tried to get his hands off her, but he pushed her to the ground and she hit her head, before two people intervened and pulled the man off her. On Sunday afternoon, the protesters were wary of further incidents but bolstered by much greater numbers, and the vast majority of passers-by seemed supportive. A few made comments which the protesters ignored. Before the walk, Green Party councillor Yunis Smith said: 'We may see some people trying to antagonise us, cause issues, trying to be abusive, aggressive, offensive, let's remember the strength, perseverance and patience that our Palestinian brothers and sisters have when we face this.' When links between the towns were first set up in 2022, Al-Mawasi, located in western Khan Younis, was a rural farming and fishing town with a population of 12,000. According to the United Nations, there were 425,000 displaced Palestinians living in the area as of June 19, and the protesters said the figure is now closer to 600,000. Israel is obliged under international humanitarian law to ensure adequate and safe shelter for internally displaced people, as well as access to food, water, and medical care, until they can return to their homes. A United Nations report released in June said that Israel had not made 'any effort' to comply with those laws since its offensive began. 'I can't understand how anybody, regardless of your political persuasion, can see this level of injustice and not break inside, I just don't, I don't get it,' said councillor Smith. Ms Lally said it was 'bittersweet' to have the council finally twin with Al-Mawasi given the devastation in the area, but still felt it was a positive step. 'Palestine is made up of communities of people and those people, they're not going away, they will rebuild, this will end, there will be a future for them and twinning sort of is just a testament to that,' she said.


Times
an hour ago
- Times
JD Vance and Rubio are Republicans to beat (if there's a vacancy)
Relaxing in the drawing room of Chevening in a red-and-pink chair, JD Vance kicked off his summer break with a mini press conference. Flanked by David Lammy, the vice-president waxed lyrical on everything from Israel to fishing. But he had less to say when a reporter asked if he was the frontrunner for the Republican nomination in 2028. 'I don't want to talk about lowly things like politics in this grand house. Come on,' he replied, keen to change the subject. Yet there's no denying that Washington is bubbling with speculation about the succession in three years' time. President Trump set the hare running on Tuesday when he was asked by a Fox reporter whether he would 'clear the field' and confirm that Vance was his heir apparent. Trump didn't go all in but he did concede his deputy was the 'most likely' and 'would be probably favourite at this point'. He then brought up his secretary of state, Marco Rubio, as 'somebody that maybe would get together with JD' on a Republican ticket. 'These things start way sooner than they should,' said Henry Barbour, a political strategist who spent 19 years on the Republican National Committee. 'The reality is the race for 2028 started when President Trump decided who was going to be his vice-presidential nominee.' Back then, Vance beat Rubio to the role after Trump concluded he lacked chemistry with the Florida senator (he had also considered Robert F Kennedy Jr but decided he was 'too crazy'). On a podcast last week Katie Miller, the wife of the influential Trump aide Stephen Miller, put to Vance the idea of a joint ticket. In response, he spoke warmly of Rubio, referencing his sweet tooth ('half the time that I see Marco in the hallway it's because he's been down to the Navy mess in the White House and he's gotten a bunch of ice cream') and sense of humour — recalling a joke he cracked about a woman in his district trying to get her dead husband's body back from Israel. 'She said 'maybe I don't want him back, the last time somebody died over here they rose from the dead three days later'. I didn't know until the very end that it was a totally bullshit joke.' The biggest question for Republicans is who can keep together the winning coalition that Trump assembled at the 2024 election, adding peaceniks, black and Latino men, granola moms and vaccine sceptics to the party's traditional core of older white conservatives. While Democrats are quick to snipe ('Vance has no charisma. He's not Trump,' said one), a Vance-Rubio ticket would have some advantages. Neither man was born rich and both have compelling back stories. Vance is a rust belt intellectual who loves a fight and has deep ties to the libertarian tech billionaire Peter Thiel. Rubio is a smooth-talker from wealthy Miami who, as the child of Cuban immigrants, also represents the new Republican voter. Hispanics had the biggest swing to Trump in 2024. 'Vance can speak to the working class. Rubio can reassure the country clubs and Latinos,' one Republican said. Both are also young by presidential standards: Vance is a spring chicken at 41 and Rubio is 54. 'They could wait two more cycles and still be very much candidates,' one insider said. Of the two, Vance has been the more consistently isolationist — though the longstanding critic of US funding for the Ukraine war spent Saturday at Chevening meeting national security advisers from Europe, the US and UK before Trump's summit with Putin on Friday. Would they miss out by not having a woman as part of the team? 'Don't be woke,' a Maga figure urged. 'No one cares.' Yet there are obvious concerns too. Would Rubio really be happy to play second fiddle after running for the presidential nomination in 2016? 'To envision yourself as the leader of the free world and then to say, 'Oh yeah, no I'm not really interested any more, that's not really a goal,' would be untrue for Marco Rubio in the same way it would be untrue for so many others who have stepped on those debate stages,' said Manuel Roig-Franzia, author of The Rise of Marco Rubio. 'People have told him since he was a young man that he could be president one day and I think he's believed it since he was a young man.' Second, voters rarely choose to promote vice-presidents to the top job. Of the 50 US vice-presidents since 1789, only 15 have gone on to become president, of whom eight took the role after the death of a president. Vance has courted the limelight more than most vice-presidents, which brings its own risk. 'There's always a chance Trump finds it too much,' one insider said. On the 2024 campaign trail he was accused of lacking warmth and in DC it's not gone unnoticed that he has embarked on a slew of podcast appearances showing his softer side. Meanwhile Rubio, who in 2016 called Trump 'an embarrassment', has become one of the president's most trusted team members, regarded as an adult in the room who is also at home with true Maga believers. Old-school Republicans look on with a sense of horror wondering if their guy has lost his principles. The politician who once quoted Reagan and championed soft power and overseas intervention now dismantles USAid and takes an America First approach. Social media users post 'Free Marco' when he appears at cabinet. 'Marco Rubio is not ideological but he is opportunistic as far as how he's evolved,' said Roig-Franza, the biographer. 'You are seeing the maturing of Marco Rubio happening before our very eyes.' Rubio and Vance both face questions over their authenticity. 'Rubio is such a neocon,' said a senior Maga figure. 'The movement kind of still hates him. As for Vance, he's just not in the fight.' Some in Maga agree with Vance's isolationism but see him as too close to Silicon Valley. Another is more diplomatic: 'It's been six months. Vance still needs to prove himself.' Other Republicans thought to be considering a tilt in 2028 include Glenn Youngkin, the more moderate governor of Virginia, and Sarah Huckabee Sanders, the governor of Arkansas who was previously Trump's White House press secretary. Expect the list to grow. In Maga circles, some predict a field of 30 candidates when the time comes. 'Do not write off Eric Trump,' said one Washington old timer. 'My view is this will be wide open,' Barbour added. But there's an alternative scenario. Will there be a vacancy to fill? Trump has flirted with running again, although the constitution prohibits it. Lately he has suggested he will indeed step down after his second term but others hope to change his mind, arguing he is essential to the Republicans staying in power. Legal routes are being explored. As Steve Bannon, the former White House strategist who has himself been reported to be considering a presidential bid, told me: 'President Trump is the only candidate that guarantees victory in 2028 — that's why people are working feverishly to make this a reality.'