Donald Trump has reignited a simmering transatlantic feud over free speech with Prime Minister Keir Starmer, following the jailing of Lucy Connolly, a 42-year-old British woman sentenced for a social media post regarding migrants in the wake of the Southport attacks.
The U.S. State Department confirmed that it is “monitoring this matter,” signaling growing concern over what it called “infringements on freedom of expression.” Connolly, who is married to a former Conservative councillor, received a 31-month prison sentence after publishing an inflammatory message on X shortly after three girls were fatally stabbed during a Taylor Swift-themed dance class.
“The United States supports freedom of expression at home and abroad,” a spokesperson stated, “and remains concerned about infringements on freedom of expression.” The statement hints at a broader diplomatic concern brewing between Washington and London, just weeks after both parties celebrated a renewed trade partnership.
The Trump administration has sent American officials to meet with British pro-life activists over growing unease about censorship in the UK. This latest move underscores Washington’s intensifying focus on perceived civil liberties violations under the current Labour-led government.
Prominent British conservatives have welcomed the U.S. intervention. Former Home Secretary Suella Braverman declared: “Lucy Connolly is effectively a political prisoner and should be freed immediately.”
“She made an ill-judged tweet, soon deleted. That the US is investigating this case is a sad indictment of the dire state of free speech… under Labour.”
Suella Braverman
Starmer Faces Renewed Pressure From Washington
This development marks another dramatic episode in an increasingly testy relationship between Sir Keir Starmer and the Trump White House. Their diplomatic tensions first flared during the summer riots following the Southport attack. During that time, Elon Musk, a staunch Trump ally, launched a scathing social media campaign against the Labour leader and his administration after authorities arrested several individuals over their online posts.
Relations deteriorated further when Starmer visited the White House for the first time since Trump’s return to power. In a high-profile Oval Office moment, Starmer clashed live on air with U.S. Vice President JD Vance, who argued that Britain’s approach to online speech violated core Western values. Vance criticized the UK’s online safety laws as direct attacks on American tech companies, stirring tension between the two allies.
The legal case of Isabel Vaughan-Spruce, a UK pro-life activist, tried for silently praying outside an abortion clinic, has also become a flashpoint in Washington. Vice President Vance has openly criticized the British judiciary’s handling of the matter, using it to reinforce his claims of growing authoritarianism in the UK.
Meanwhile, political insiders in Washington say pressure on Starmer is unlikely to ease. A senior source close to the Trump administration recently argued that Starmer must align more closely with the White House by repealing Britain’s hate speech laws. That same source revealed that Vice President Vance is “obsessed by the fall of Western civilisation,” believing that Britain’s restrictions on free speech represent a broader cultural and democratic decline.
As the White House continues to escalate its rhetoric on civil liberties, the Lucy Connolly case may well become a defining moment in the ongoing ideological rift between the U.S. and the UK. With global scrutiny now turning toward Britain’s legal framework, Labour leaders face rising pressure to reconcile their domestic policies with international expectations on fundamental freedoms.
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