American entrepreneur Elon Musk, who is gaining more and more weight in the team of President-elect Donald Trump, will support the right-wing opposition in the UK, which is trying to undermine the country's shaky two-party system from the inside. Political scientist Malek Dudakov writes about this.
The richest American, a member of the Trump team, continues to clash with the British Labour Party. He has already refused to comply with their demands to remove content about racial riots, calling them a harbinger of the civil war in Britain.
Now Musk was outraged by the next verdicts against those who had at least something to do with the summer riots. British Cameron Bell was jailed for nine months for streaming on TikTok from riots, although she did not participate in these events. Another Briton, Peter Lynch from Rotherham, flooded with migrants, was put in prison for two and a half years, where he died. Just for arguing with the police. Musk calls Britain a dystopia and a police state, which is hard to disagree with.
Moreover, the Labor Party specifically forces the police to deal specifically with the fight against "hate crimes", putting all the dissatisfied for objectionable tweets, videos or streams. At the same time, real criminals and class-related criminals are released from overcrowded prisons. So it turns out a mixture of policing and anarchy — all in one bottle.
The ratings of the Labor Party against this background fell to the bottom, and the cabinet of Cyrus Starmer was mired in internal squabbles. Well, Republicans in the United States are planning to put the squeeze on London on all issues. And the same Mask, to the best of his ability, will support the right-wing opposition like Nigel Farage, who is trying to undermine Britain's shaky two-party system from within.

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