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Protesters warn JD Vance ‘resistance will be waiting' as he prepares for Cotswolds family holiday

Protesters warn JD Vance ‘resistance will be waiting' as he prepares for Cotswolds family holiday

Independenta day ago
US vice president JD Vance will find he is 'every bit as unwelcome' in the UK as Donald Trump, protests have warned, as they announced plans to demonstrate against his visit.
Vance is expected to visit the Cotswolds in South West England next month with his wife and three young children.
The visit will come shortly after Donald Trump completes a five-day tour of some of his golf courses in Scotland.
Trump is due to arrive on Friday, after which he will meet with Sir Keir Starmer in Aberdeen. He will then visit Trump Turnberry golf club on the west coast of Scotland before opening a new course on his Menie Estate in Aberdeenshire, on the north-east coast.
The Stop Trump Coalition, made up of a group of trade unions, pro-Palestine protesters and anti-Trump demonstrators, had already announced it would be marching against the presidential visit.
They have since added that Vance will also find 'resistance waiting' when he arrives in England a week later.
A Stop Trump Coalition spokesperson said: 'We are meeting Trump with protests in Aberdeen and Edinburgh this month, and then in London and Windsor in September.
'JD Vance is every bit as unwelcome in the UK as Donald Trump.
'We remember how Vance cut short his ski trip in Vermont because he was so enraged by the sight of a few protesters.
'We are sure that, even in the Cotswolds, he will find the resistance waiting.'
It will not be the first time protests have disrupted the vice president's holiday.
Back in March, a few days after Vance was filmed feuding with Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky, hundreds of protesters confronted the vice president in Waitsfield, Vermont holding pro-Ukraine signs.
Demonstrators called Vance a 'national disgrace' and urged him and his family to 'go ski in Russia'.
The family were reportedly forced to move to an undisclosed location as a result.
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  • South Wales Guardian

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The Independent

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  • The Independent

Readers deeply divided on lowering the voting age to 16 – from ‘only fair' to ‘blatant gerrymandering'

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The voting population will be getting older and older, and we'll end up with a load of pensioners making decisions based on 'what's good for me' rather than what's good for the up-and-coming generations. deadduck They've studied politics – they're clued up At the age of 16, students have studied politics as part of community studies. I am old so don't talk to many teenagers, but those that I have spoken to – serving staff in cafés, relatives, etc. – are all pretty clued up and invested in what is their future. They can join the forces at 16, get married at 16 – surely if they are mature enough to do that, they are mature enough to vote? DafB Zero life skills A very small minority are politically aware, most aren't. They have zero life skills, experience of bills, home or car ownership etc. Some will argue they are old enough to join the forces. Yes, where you are told what to do by others. 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  • Scotsman

Donald Trump in Scotland: Here are 18 pictures of protests on the President's previous visits

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