POLITICO: The Starmer-Macron bromance has a Donald Trump problem

10:01 08.07.2025 •

The French president’s arrival on British shores this week — the first full state visit afforded to a French president since Nicholas Sarkozy in 2008 — is a significant marker of friendship after years of bad blood between the two countries, POLITICO stresses.

The two leaders have warmed to each other since Starmer took the reins in Downing Street, with the prime minister pushing to ease longstanding tensions between the United Kingdom and France, as well as the wider European Union.

Their meeting this week promises much: closer cooperation on defense, a new agreement on tackling migration flows across the English Channel and progress on nuclear collaboration, not to mention a stay at King Charles’ Windsor Castle for France’s president and first lady.

But beyond the backslapping and handshakes, hairline cracks have started to appear in the cross-Channel bromance.

London and Paris have so far coordinated closely to try to keep Donald Trump in the room for Ukraine peace talks. With progress stalled, British and French officials are now letting slip some annoyance at how the other side has chosen to handle the mercurial U.S. president.

“There has been a clear, tactical decision from No. 10 to have difficult conversations in private,” said one British former senior diplomat, granted anonymity like others in this piece to speak candidly. “That’s not so much Macron’s style.”

François-Joseph Schichan, a former French diplomat and a director at consultancy Flint Global, agreed this week should be seen as “a summit of reconciliation,” but acknowledged there would nonetheless be “differences on issues, on how to deal with Trump.”

As one French academic with links to Macron put it, the British premier is “much more cautious” when it comes to dealing with the White House.

The same former British diplomat quoted above said Macron had “done some stroking but not as much as we have” when it comes to Trump’s ego. They described Starmer’s softly-softly strategy in dealing with the president as “shameless but necessary.”

Macron has shown himself more willing to undercut Trump, visiting Greenland in a show of solidarity and drawing the U.S. president’s ire by suggesting to reporters that Trump was leaving the G7 early to negotiate a ceasefire between Israel and Iran. In public, Starmer and Trump have been all smiles.

In particular, Macron is thought to be unhappy at the deal struck between Starmer and Trump to mitigate U.S. tariffs on U.K. goods, while France remains subject to the penalties imposed on the EU.

“There are still details to be negotiated” on the U.K.-U.S. deal, noted Schichan. “I expect Macron will put pressure on Starmer not to accept all of Trump’s demands and to present a united European front,” when the 90-day freeze on U.S. tariffs expires on Wednesday.

An official from Macron’s Renew party went further. They claimed that the British had given the impression “they are ready to sell their soul for a deal with the U.S.” which had even prompted Europeans to conclude “they are not sincere in talks with us [the EU].”

Perhaps more seriously, there are also hints of tension in the pair’s efforts to preserve Ukraine ceasefire negotiations.

Two French officials admitted there was a lack of direction for the “coalition of the willing” and suggested part of the problem was the importance given by the U.K. to security guarantees from the U.S., which have so far not materialized.

Eager to head off such misgivings, Downing Street has now scheduled a meeting of the coalition during Macron’s visit.

In turn, some in London accuse Macron of having one eye on his own legacy in his international postures as he nears the end of his time in office. One official familiar with E3 talks on Iran said Macron had been attempting to prove himself as a “peacemaker” during those negotiations.

Elsewhere, simmering resentments remain: over the deal on fisheries extracted by the French during U.K.-EU “reset” negotiations and the difference in approach to illegal Channel crossings. While the under-pressure U.K. government is consistently pushing for tougher measures on the French side, France sees it as an EU-wide matter and not just a bilateral one.

 

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