I fear that the President has poured fuel on the fire of extremism; and created enemies, rather than winning friends.
Democrats, meanwhile, are still searching for a response.
We can build a Britain that is fair on immigration, trades globally and is outward-looking – underpinned by great values of equality, fairness and freedom.
The element of surprise can work if it outfoxes the opposition, but not if shocks your own side.
Watch what he says, and what he does – not what we think he means, represents, or how he comes across.
This is probably a conversation that needs to take place between political staff on either side of the Atlantic.
The Foreign Secretary addresses the House of Commons on the subject of Donald Trump’s new immigration restrictions.
What’s the basis for this popular call to bar the President from Britain? That his “well-documented misogyny and vulgarity” would “cause embarrassment to Her Majesty”.
The Prime Minister grinds out her points on NATO and Russia, while Trump is riled by a question from the BBC’s Laura Kuenssberg.
“It’s a great honour to have Winston Churchill back,” the President says – pointing to the bust situated behind them.
She meets Donald Trump later today.
We have a legal and a moral duty to protect them. The President’s order feels like an attack on our shared humanity.