Brexit Will Be Great Says Trump, Promises Quick Trade Deal

US President-elect Donald Trump has said Brexit will be a "great thing". Reuters

US President-elect Donald Trump said that Brexit would turn out to be a great thing and other countries would follow Britain out of the European Union. He promised to strike a swift bilateral trade deal with the United Kingdom.

Speaking in an interview with The Times five days before his inauguration, Trump described himself as a big fan of Britain and endorsed last year's vote to leave the European Union.

"I think Brexit is going to end up being a great thing," Trump said. "I'll tell you, the fact that your pound sterling has gone down? Great. Because business is unbelievable in a lot of parts in the UK."

The June 23 vote took many investors and chief executives by surprise, triggering the deepest political and financial turmoil in Britain since World War II and the biggest ever one-day fall in sterling against the dollar.

Sterling has since fallen further against the US dollar as traders, businesses and investors fret about the type of relationship Britain will have with its biggest single trading partner after it leaves the bloc.

Trump's election campaign seized on the Brexit vote as an example of disillusioned voters rising up against the political establishment, and he forged a friendship with leading Brexit campaigner Nigel Farage – a fierce critic of Prime Minister Theresa May.

"Special relationship"

Trump's election has raised questions over the future of the so called 'special relationship' that has underpinned close British-American ties for decades.

But in Sunday's interview Trump played up his ancestral ties to Britain, saying his Scottish mother was "so proud" of Queen Elizabeth, and said he was eager to get a trade deal done.

"We're gonna work very hard to get it done quickly and done properly. Good for both sides," Trump said. "I will be meeting with [May]. She's requesting a meeting and we'll have a meeting right after I get into the White House... we're gonna get something done very quickly."

However, he predicted that more countries would seek to follow Britain's example and quit the EU.

"I believe others will leave," he said. "If refugees keep pouring into different parts of Europe...I think it's gonna be very hard to keep it together because people are angry about it."

He singled out German Chancellor Angela Merkel – whose open-door policies have allowed about 1.1 million refugees from Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere into Germany since mid-2015 – calling her immigration policy a catastrophic mistake.

News
The unyielding faith of one woman that shook an empire
The unyielding faith of one woman that shook an empire

In the year AD 203, a young woman named Vibia Perpetua stepped into a Roman arena in Carthage, North Africa. The crowd jeered, wild beasts prowled, and death was certain. Yet she did not hesitate.

Joy in the journey – serving King Jesus, meeting King Charles
Joy in the journey – serving King Jesus, meeting King Charles

Nicki Duncalfe said 'yes' to God's call, leaving behind comfort and career to support her husband’s mission flying with MAF, raise her boys cross-culturally, and live out her faith in extraordinary ways.

Pope Leo XIV’s first Mass sends a defining message of faith in a distracted world
Pope Leo XIV’s first Mass sends a defining message of faith in a distracted world

Standing beneath Michelangelo’s towering fresco of the Last Judgement, newly elected Pope Leo XIV delivered his first papal homily in the Sistine Chapel, setting a bold and unmistakable tone for his pontificate. His message: reclaim an authentic vision of Jesus Christ or risk living in a state of “practical atheism”.

China clamps down on foreign missionaries
China clamps down on foreign missionaries

China has imposed sweeping restrictions on Christian practices.