Jeremy Clarkson has refreshed his crusade against Prime Minister Keir Starmer as the Labour leader faces a potential back bench rebellion over cuts to welfare and the farmer tax row.
The 64-year-old writer and broadcaster has redoubled his focus on matters closer to home after recently turning his ire to US Vice President JD Vance.
Writing in his column for The Times, Clarkson took a break from Starmer to savage JD Vance, following his ‘random countries’ jibe at the UK and the “despicable” oval office fracas with Ukrainian leader Volodymyr Zelensky.
“I’ve searched for the right word to describe him and I think it’s ‘t**t. He also has no clue about history,” the former Top Gear presenter fumed.
Clarkson had recently turned his turned his ire to JD Vance and US foreign policy
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The 64-year-old also attacked the vice president as a “bearded God-botherer” and hit out at his stance on abortion rights.
However, one fan was not convinced by Clarkson’s turn on the new Trump administration – which the former Grand Tour host had previously admitted admiring.
“He’s trying to atone for his absurd statement on Putin being preferable to Starmer,” the unimpressed X user wrote.
The user referenced a column written by Clarkson in February in which he claimed he would welcome any other leader, even by way of conquest, “with open arms.”
His invitation extended to US President Donald Trump, Italian Prime Minister Georgia Meloni and even Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Faced with the fan’s comment, Clarkson doubled down on his previous put down of the Labour leader.
Clarkson had previously said he would prefer Putin over Starmer
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Starmer and the Labour government are facing a potential MP revolt over welfare cuts and the farm tax row
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A further 40 lawmakers may also resist the divisive “family farm tax” set to be imposed on Britain’s rural communities by Chancellor Rachel Reeves.
The tax raid will slap farmers with 20 per cent death duties on assets over £1million, sparking fury from cash-poor asset rich farmers.
Clarkson’s opposition to the new tax has been a central theme in his regular criticism of the Labour government, rallying support on the back of his wildly successful Amazon show covering life at his Diddly Squat Oxfordshire farm.
The so-called “rural growth group” in parliament reportedly wish to see Reeves exempt older farmers or those who are ill from the raid.
Despite the potential challenge, Starmer’s huge 167 seat parliamentary majority likely means he and the Government will be effectively unimpeded moving forward with the proposed changes.