Trump's Hypocrisy: Silencing US Media While Vilifying London's Mayor Sadiq Khan


September 20, 2025

JamRadio News | Political Analysis

Donald Trump’s political theatre thrives on contradiction. In the United States, he has threatened to shut down broadcasters who dare to criticise him. In Britain, during his state visit, he boasted to reporters that he personally asked for London's Mayor Sadiq Khan to be excluded from the King’s state banquet at Windsor Castle.

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The hypocrisy is glaring. Trump’s defenders on GB News, including Beverley Turner, insisted he would never break protocol or show such bad manners. Yet Trump himself bragged about doing exactly that — lobbying to keep an elected British mayor off the guest list of a royal banquet.

GB New presenter Beverly Turner spins a narrative that Trump is too polite and respectful to interfere in royal protocal, something which Trump himself contradicts

Hypocrisy Without Borders

What makes this hypocrisy even more obvious is that, Trump spews the very kind of hate and personalised critique he claims should be banned when directed at him. He denounces U.S. broadcasters for “unfair attacks,” yet in Britain he openly targets and verbally insults Sadiq Khan and went further — rudely interfering in UK politics by suggesting Prime Minister Keir Starmer should deploy the military in the English Channel. The man who demands silence from his critics has no hesitation in exporting his own hostility abroad.

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By labelling Khan “among the worst mayors in the world,” Trump reframed a civic leader into a personal enemy. This mirrors his attacks on journalists and broadcasters who challenge him. The tactic is consistent: delegitimise critics, then justify their exclusion.

GB News in the Crosshairs

The role of GB News is equally telling. Rather than scrutinise Trump’s words, Turner and her colleagues attempted to launder his image, claiming he would never meddle in protocol. The contradiction is now on tape: GB News spin on one side, Trump’s own admission on the other.

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This is not about a dinner invitation. It is about the normalisation of censorship instincts dressed up as strength. When media outlets echo the spin instead of confronting the receipts, they become complicit in propaganda.

Trump’s boast about sidelining Khan is not an isolated slip. It is part of a pattern: silence the critics, rewrite the rules, and call it leadership.