Analysis
Trump’s
address to world leaders at the UN was for a different audience: his base
Andrew
Roth
in New
York
Trump
told the assembled European leaders that they were destroying their own
countries in a move that was ‘basically Maga madlibs’
Tue 23
Sep 2025 21.04 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/sep/23/trump-un-speech-maga-base
Donald
Trump may have been speaking to the 192 other world leaders gathered in the
United Nations, but the real target of his speech on Tuesday was Europe, which
was hauled up repeatedly as the whipping boy for an antiliberal, blood-and-soil
polemic that renewed an assault on the transatlantic relationship that has
become a theme of his second administration.
In an
hourlong address to the assembled world leaders and delegations, Trump told
European leaders directly that they were destroying their own countries – and
that they should be more like the US as he condemned their policies on
immigration, green energy and political correctness.
These
were not subtle digs. On migration, he told Europeans that “your countries are
going to hell.” On Europe’s approach to climate change, he said it was “on the
brink of destruction because of the green energy agenda”. On the war in
Ukraine, he said Europe was “funding the war against themselves. Who the hell
ever heard of that one?”
He even
found time to target local politicians such as Sadiq Khan, whom he called a
“terrible, terrible mayor” and said that London “wants to go to Sharia law”.
There was a barrage of claims about immigrants and questionable statistics
about the prison populations in Germany and “beautiful Switzerland”. At
moments, he would not have been out of place running for European parliament.
“If you
don’t stop people that you’ve never seen before, that you have nothing in
common with, your country is going to fail,” he said during the speech. “I’m
the president of the United States, but I worry about Europe. I love Europe, I
love the people of Europe. And I hate to see it being devastated by [green]
energy and immigration, that double-tailed monster that destroys everything in
its wake.”
This is
red meat for his supporters, and observers from across the aisle in the United
States quickly identified Trump’s likely audience as his own base. The first 10
minutes were almost a classic stump speech, with Trump telling foreign leaders
about how well he had handled inflation and that after just eight months in
office “we are the hottest country anywhere in the world, and there is no other
country even close”.
But then
he turned his gaze to the failures of the United Nations and other world
leaders – in which an aide forecast that he would denounce “globalists”. US
conservatives would have been delighted to watch Trump tear into European
liberals, who were forced to watch and politely applaud as they were accused of
gross mismanagement of their countries.
“Let’s
not pretend this is a foreign policy speech or dignify it by calling it one,”
wrote Ned Price, a former deputy to the US representative to the United Nations
during the Biden administration. “This is basically Maga madlibs. Trump is
speaking to his political base, hitting each of his campaign trail hits, while
addressing a room of leaders who’d rather be just about anywhere else.”
If
Trump’s speech did have a foreign policy predecessor, it would be JD Vance’s
address earlier this year at the Munich security conference, when the US
vice-president launched into a tirade against European leaders over
conservative hobby horses including migration and claims that Europe was
stifling free speech.
“No voter
on this continent went to the ballot box to open the floodgates to millions of
unvetted immigrants,” Vance told them during a speech that the EU’s top
diplomat said sounded like he was “trying to pick a fight”. “If you are running
in fear of your own voters, there is nothing America can do for you.”
Trump
didn’t mention European voters on Tuesday, but he did accuse European leaders
of “destroying your heritage” – a claim shared by rightwing groups in Europe
with whom the US president and his allies have been increasingly friendly.
“You’re
doing it because you want to be nice, you want to be politically correct,” he
told them mockingly. Once again, it sounded very much like the administration
was seeking to pick a fight with Europe.

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