Officials defend Biden against accusation that he is anti-British ahead of Belfast speech

Officials were forced to defend President Joe Biden’s trip to Ireland on Wednesday, insisting it was work – not just fun – and deflecting accusations that he is anti-British during his brief visit to Northern Ireland.

He would start his day with a meeting with British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak before greeting five local party leaders followed by a speech at Ulster University.

But questions about his stance on Britain and Ireland, and who will pay for his son Hunter and sister Valerie to travel with him, dominated a morning briefing.

Amanda Sloat, senior director for Europe at the National Security Council, was asked if the famed Irish-American president was anti-British, as pro-London unionist politicians claimed.

“I think the president’s record shows he is not anti-British,” she said.

Joe Biden was greeted by Rishi Sunak on the steps of Air Force One in Belfast on Tuesday night (pictured). They will talk on Wednesday morning

Biden disembarked Air Force One on the apron at RAF Aldergrove Airbase in County Antrim on Tuesday

Biden disembarked Air Force One on the apron at RAF Aldergrove Airbase in County Antrim on Tuesday

Biden’s long history of ‘anti-British’ views

There are fears that Joe Biden could infuriate unionists with references to his Irish heritage during his visit to Belfast.

As vice president, Biden greatly offended Northern Ireland’s trade union community when he joked at a St. Patrick’s Day event, “If you wear orange, you’re not welcome here.”

Northern Ireland’s mainly Protestant Unionist community associates with the color in celebration of William of Orange’s victory over Catholic forces at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690.

As a senator in 1985, he spoke out against making it easier for IRA militants from the US to Britain, a sentiment popular with Irish-Americans but not in Britain.

He has often spoken of his mother’s hatred of England, so intense that she once refused to use a bed in which Queen Elizabeth II had slept.

In his memoir, “Promises to Keep,” he recalls his English last name, Biden, with some embarrassment.

And he describes how his Irish-American Aunt Gertie Finnegan once said to him, “Your father is not a bad man. He’s just English.’

In 2020, as president-elect, he was conducting a brutal investigation into Britain’s national broadcaster when a BBC reporter yelled a question at him. “The BBC?” he said as he continued smiling. “I’m Irish.”

However, Biden has a history of making anti-English jokes and has often described his mother’s animosity towards the UK and its crown.

Sloat cited examples of cooperation between the Biden administration and London.

“The UK remains one of our strongest and closest allies,” she said.

And frankly it’s hard to think of an issue in the world that we don’t work closely with the British on and so this morning the president wanted the opportunity to talk to Prime Minister Sunak to start his day in this . Belfast.’

The reason for Biden’s trip is to mark the 25th anniversary of the Belfast Good Friday Agreement, which ended decades of sectarian and political violence known as “the Troubles.”

But he arrives at an awkward time as the province’s power-sharing government has been suspended amid political bickering.

The brevity of his stay in Northern Ireland has irritated local leaders, who question whether it is part of a strategy to minimize the likelihood of blunders.

And with just 17 hours in Belfast before departing on a genealogical tour of Ireland, Sloat was asked if the visit was really a taxpayer-funded family reunion.

“I would, not surprisingly, challenge that characterization,” she said icily, before listing appointments with the British Prime Minister and official events to mark the Good Friday-Belfast Agreement.

In his speech at Ulster University, Biden will congratulate the province and its leaders on 25 years of peace with a speech at Ulster University.

But he is expected not to try to resolve the political deadlock in the region.

The Northern Ireland government has not sat for almost a year amid a row over post-Brexit trade arrangements.

Although trade rules have been reformed, the Democratic Unionist Party refuses to go back to power-sharing institutions.

They are alert to any perceived slight.

Unionists view his Irish roots with suspicion and have made it clear that they will not tolerate his intervention in their local dispute.

A crowd gathered outside the Belfast city center hotel where Biden was staying on Wednesday

A crowd gathered outside the Belfast city center hotel where Biden was staying on Wednesday

Police placed a ring of steel around the city center hotel where Biden was staying Tuesday night

Police placed a ring of steel around the city center hotel where Biden was staying Tuesday night

Biden is spotted in The Beast, his armored car, as he arrived in Belfast on Tuesday night

Biden is spotted in The Beast, his armored car, as he arrived in Belfast on Tuesday night

As Ian Paisley Jr., of the hardline Democratic Unionist Party, put it on TalkTV, “the poor chap is unfortunately quite prone to blunders,” adding, “It would be like a Frenchman coming up to you and telling you what you England must do. .’

The standoff takes some of the shine off the visit, which is meant to mark 25 years of Belfast’s Good Friday Agreement, which ended decades of sectarian violence and violence known as ‘the Troubles’ .

Sloat said she would not discuss what would come up in the meetings.

“I think in a broad sense and as I said, the president clearly supports the institutions,” she told reporters during a morning briefing.

“The president, like everyone else in Northern Ireland and the leader of the UK, is eager to see the institutions work.”

Biden arrived in Belfast in a major police operation, the largest in the province in the past 10 years.

Some 300 officers have been called up from elsewhere in the UK to bolster the numbers, at a total cost of £7 million (approximately $8.7 million).

1681297498 62 Officials defend Biden against accusation that he is anti British ahead

Biden’s maternal line emigrated from Ireland during the Great Famine. The Blewitts left Co. Mayo and settled in Scranton, PA, while the Finnegans Co. left Louth and came to New York

Where will Biden go on his four-day tour?

TUESDAY – Landing in Belfast

WEDNESDAY – Meet Rishi Sunak in Belfast and head to Ulster University to celebrate the Good Friday Agreement.

Biden travels to Dublin and then County Louth.

THURSDAY – Biden will hold separate meetings in Dublin with Irish President Michael Higgins and Prime Minister Leo Varadkar before addressing Dáil Éireann, the Irish Parliament.

FRIDAY – Biden will visit County Mayo, research the family’s genealogy and give a speech on US-Ireland ties

Biden is making his first visit to Northern Ireland and is expected to congratulate the milestone and encourage the country’s leaders to work on economic and trade deals.

Unionists are already wary of any perceived contempt.

Biden has already been roundly condemned by the DUP for being “extremely partisan” and “anti-British” after repeatedly trumpeting his Irish roots.

Instead, the president will issue at least two messages, White House National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said.

“Congratulations on 25 years of the Good Friday Agreement, which has brought unprecedented peace and prosperity,” Kirby said. And that goes to the second goal, which is to talk about the importance of trying to work on trade and economic policy. that benefit all communities, as well as the United States.”

Biden previously wrote on Twitter: “25 years ago Northern Ireland’s leaders chose peace.

The Belfast-Good Friday deal ended decades of violence and brought stability. I look forward to celebrating the anniversary in Belfast and underlining the US’s commitment to keeping the peace and promoting prosperity.”