Donald Trump accuses UK Labour party of interference in White House race

Donald Trump accuses UK Labour party of interference in White House race

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Donald Trump’s presidential campaign has filed a legal complaint against the UK’s Labour party, alleging “illegal foreign campaign contributions and interference” to help Kamala Harris in the US presidential election.

The complaint filed to the independent Federal Election Commission accuses the Labour party of sending strategists to help the Democratic presidential candidate’s election campaign and says Harris has accepted the help.

“When representatives of the British government previously sought to go door-to-door in America, it did not end well for them,” lawyers for the Trump campaign wrote in a letter to the FEC dated Monday.

Trump’s legal team cited media reports that Labour party officials — including Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s chief of staff Morgan McSweeney; his head of strategy Deborah Mattinson; and Matthew Doyle, Downing Street’s director of communications — had travelled to the US in recent months to advise the Harris campaign.

The complaint also cites a now deleted LinkedIn post from Sofia Patel, head of operations at the Labour party, who wrote that “nearly 100” current and former Labour party staff would be travelling to the US in the coming weeks to help elect Harris, the Democratic vice-president. “[We] will sort out your housing,” the post added.

Trump’s lawyers argue such support amounts to “contributions” from foreign actors, in violation of US campaign finance laws.

The Republican candidate’s lawyers requested an “immediate investigation” into what they described as “blatant foreign interference” in the election by both Labour and Harris’s campaign.

The complaint comes with less than two weeks to go in one of the tightest US election races ever. Trump and Harris are locked in a dead heat in the polls, according to the Financial Times’ tracker.

“In two weeks, Americans will once again reject the oppression of big government that we rejected in 1776,” said Susie Wiles, co-chair of Trump’s campaign. Wiles said Harris’s campaign was “flailing” and “seeking foreign influence to boost its radical message”.

A spokesperson for the Harris campaign did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The Labour party could not be immediately reached for comment.

Emily Thornberry, Labour chair of the House of Commons foreign affairs committee, told the BBC that the party would not stop its activists campaigning in the US election.

However, she questioned the utility of the move. “I actually don’t think that British politicians going over to America and telling the Americans the way they should vote really helps.” She added that she would not like it if “an American politician came here and told me how to vote”.

Starmer and Trump met for the first time last month on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York, where he and the former Republican president shared a two-hour dinner.

Starmer said at the time that it was up to the US electorate to decide who their next leader would be, and insisted: “We will work with whoever is president.” Trump told reporters ahead of the meeting that the prime minister was “very nice”.