Tuesday, 7 February 2017

Donald Trump will not be allowed to visit Parliament to the British Parliament

Donald Trump will not welcome a visit to the United Kingdom because it opposes racism and gender discrimination and addresses the parliament, the Speaker of the House of Commons said in a major buffer for the US President.

In a dramatic intervention, speaker John Belko said he was "strongly opposed" to Trump in the House of Commons because he stressed that being invited to speak in parliament was "not an automatic right" but " An honor. "


"I have been strongly opposed to President Tramm's speech at the Westminster Hall before the immigration ban," Mr. Bercow told MPs.
 
"After President Trumb's immigration prohibition, I was even more strongly opposed to President Tramm's speech at the Westminster Hall.

Some of the public broke out as a rare spontaneous applause in support of Mr. Bercow's statement.

This intervention will lead to Downing Street headache, Terry Samei has been turning back, re-ignited the so-called special relationship with the United States.

Veteran Labor MP Dennis Skinner, after Mr. Bercow's statement, said: "Further procedural questions: Two words: well done.

"We value our relationship with the United States, and if a country visit occurs, it is above and beyond the pay scale of the speaker," the speaker said.

"However, as far as this place is concerned, I strongly believe that our opposition to racism and gender discrimination and our support for the equal and independent judiciary before the law is a very important consideration in the House of Commons.

Theresa could invite Mr. Trump to visit the United States recently and pay a state visit to Britain. She said he would fly to the UK by the end of the year.

Labor leader Jeremy Kobe and others said the visit should be canceled until Trump canceled his "Muslim ban" from travelers from some countries.
 
Whether the controversial president will discuss the parliament is a special source of controversy. Foreign leaders visiting foreign countries are sometimes located in the Lower House of Westminster, or in the House of Lords' Royal Gallery.

Trump's visit is rapidly becoming a political minefield. His team is said to want to avoid any meetings with Prince Charles, whose environmental movement may make him inconsistent with the president.

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Speaker John Bercow in the House of Commons (Commons)
Mr. Bercow said he was one of the three "key figures" in the Westminster Hall and said he would not allow the Royal Gallery of the House of Commons to be invited in his name.

He admitted that he would "probably have a strong voice in this matter," but said, "Normally, inviting the visiting leaders to deliver a speech there will be issued in the name of two speakers.

Donald Trump has issued a controversial order
"I do not want to invite President Trump to speak at the Royal Gallery," he concludes.

The speaker's intervention was a particularly alarming development because the position was politically neutral. Mr. Bercow was formerly a Conservative MP, before he was elected to the role; by convention, he gave up any partisan relationship.

Nearly two million people signed a request that Trump's state visit be canceled within days of the announcement. Lawmakers will debate the issue in the lobby of Westminster.