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Let this be a warning โ€“ if Europe worries about Trump, it has even more reason to fear JD Vance | Gaby Hinsliff

His toxic Henry Nowak intervention fits a pattern. Vance has hard-right views, a disdain for European society โ€“ and he may yet become president I mmigration is falling in Britain . Itโ€™s falling so fast and so hard โ€“ net migration to the UK nearly halved between 2024 and 2025 โ€“ t

Let this be a warning โ€“ if Europe worries about Trump, it has even more reason to fear JD Vance | Gaby Hinsliff
Guardian Politics โ€” 9 June 2026
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His toxic Henry Nowak intervention fits a pattern. Vance has hard-right views, a disdain for European society โ€“ and he may yet become president

I mmigration is falling in Britain . Itโ€™s falling so fast and so hard โ€“ net migration to the UK nearly halved between 2024 and 2025 โ€“ that before long we could conceivably be a shrinking population , with more people leaving the country than coming here. (And no, thatโ€™s not because of an exodus of bright young Britons fleeing overseas, though you wouldnโ€™t blame them given how hard theyโ€™re finding it currently to get jobs: the rise, as the Institute for Governmentโ€™s Sam Freedman helpfully points out , is mainly in foreign students and foreign workers going home.) Even small-boat crossings are down on last year. We have, in short, finally made ourselves as unattractive to the rest of the world as leave voters always wanted โ€“ which means that, sooner or later, populists who built their careers on railing against supposedly uncontrolled immigration are going to be needing another scapegoat to explain why taking back control hasnโ€™t magically solved all the countryโ€™s problems. And with a grim inevitability, theyโ€™re finding it in turning on migrants who are already here.

Thatโ€™s the background to two hand grenades lobbed aggressively into British politics from across the Atlantic last week, causing enough concern in Downing Street to prompt a rare public rebuke. The claim from the US vice-president, JD Vance, that โ€œrighteous angerโ€ was โ€œ the only response โ€ to the murder of 18-year-old Henry Nowak would have been provocative enough, given its pointed echo of Nigel Farageโ€™s now widely condemned call for โ€œ pure, cold rage โ€.

But Vance took it further even than Farage dared, arguing that Henry would be alive today โ€œif the last few generations of European elites had stood their ground against the politics of self-hatred and the mass invasion of migrantsโ€. Or, in other words, life would be better generally if Britain had pulled up the drawbridge decades ago. Seemingly the vice-president either doesnโ€™t know or doesnโ€™t care that Henryโ€™s family has Polish roots , for Vance was of course targeting the killer, Vickrum Digwa, the British-born son of a British-born father whose mother is understood to have been born โ€“ like Vanceโ€™s own mother-in-law, oddly enough โ€“ in India . Washingtonโ€™s new favourite British wannabe populist, Rupert Lowe of the hard-right splinter party Restore, has already called for Digwaโ€™s โ€œforeign familyโ€ to be deported.

Not to be outdone in the offensiveness stakes, the US defence secretary, Pete Hegseth , then marked the anniversary of the D-day landings in France during what is a crucial election year by complaining that European beaches were being stormed today by โ€œdifferent, dangerous ideologiesโ€, arriving in small boats. (Illegal border crossings are falling in Europe too, if you were wondering, with a 40% drop in the first four months of 2026.) He did not appear to grasp the irony that those defending the beaches on D-day were the Nazis.

This was always going to be a tense few weeks for transatlantic relations, leading up to a critical Nato summit in July but also to a long-awaited British government crackdown on social-media harms that is liable to anger Magaโ€™s free-speech warriors. But Vanceโ€™s intervention raises the stakes alarmingly. Most of what Europe has endured under Trumpโ€™s second presidency, from on-off trade wars to the threatened withdrawal of US troops from Europe, can just about be explained by a brutally self-interested โ€œAmerica firstโ€ doctrine under which the US now ruthlessly looks after its own, at the rest of the worldโ€™s expense. But picking a fight over the immigration policies of some far-off island with which the US doesnโ€™t share a border doesnโ€™t fit the pattern. It does nothing to help the average voter in rural Ohio or small-town Texas: itโ€™s a purely ideological, or perhaps more accurately evangelical, attempt to reshape the world in Magaโ€™s image that dangerously undermines the democratically elected governments of supposedly friendly countries in the process.

David Lammy, the former foreign secretary, let it be known he had called his supposedly great friend Vance and told him he was wrong. But that seems unlikely to deter Vance, for whom the idea that Europe is somehow trembling on the brink of civilisational collapse is more than a passing fad.

It was Vanceโ€™s argument at last yearโ€™s Munich Security Conference that Europeโ€™s greatest threat came โ€œfrom withinโ€ that seriously spooked European leaders, as much or even more than the accompanying threat to stop funding the continentโ€™s defence. Since then, the vice-president has deliberately broken the taboo of engaging with far-right politicians across Europe, from Germanyโ€™s Alternative fรผr Deutschland party to Franceโ€™s Marine Le Pen , before he actively (though unsuccessfully) weighed in on behalf of Hungaryโ€™s populist leader Viktor Orbรกn during recent elections. Last month, he responded to a British far-right rally organised by Tommy Robinson by encouraging anti-immigration activists to โ€œ keep on going โ€. Though the defeat of Orbรกn offers some reassurance that the USโ€™s influence has its limits, Vance is nothing if not a quick learner.

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