Joe Biden wastes no time wading into Brexit debate as Irish roots colour his view

US President-elect Joe Biden participates in a virtual meeting with the United States Conference of Mayors at the Queen in Wilmington, Delaware - AFP
US President-elect Joe Biden participates in a virtual meeting with the United States Conference of Mayors at the Queen in Wilmington, Delaware - AFP

Joe Biden wasted no time putting the boot into Britain.

During his campaign, Mr Biden promised a return to diplomatic niceties and to be a supportive friend to US allies.

Instead, the day after he formally became president-elect, and nearly two months before he enters the Oval Office, he decided to take a swipe at one of America's closest partners.

Britain can expect this to be an opening salvo from a newly engaged but somewhat hectoring ally across the Atlantic.

With global re-engagement will come a tendency to interfere and to wield a diplomatic stick. There is an argument that public utterances like this from Mr Biden are for domestic consumption in the US. He has a strong Irish-American lobby in Congress to satisfy, as does Nancy Pelosi, the Speaker.

The Good Friday Agreement holds a special place in Democrat hearts due to the work of Bill Clinton. But this seems more likely to be a signal of a re-emerging US willingness to put its oar into allies' affairs.

Officials in capitals around the world welcomed the end of Donald Trump's "America First" foreign policy, but they will now have to deal with a US that, as it re-engages, will want something back and won't shy away from using its diplomatic megaphone

Mr Biden has denied that the next four years will be an "Obama third term" but already, on Brexit, he looks set to make the same mistake that Mr Obama did in trying to put his thumb on the scales in the 2016 Brexit referendum.

Obama era officials have since expressed surprise that the then US president failed to "move the needle" on Brexit. One of those officials was Tony Blinken, who will be Mr Biden's secretary of state.

Mr Blinken spoke recently about the dangers of "interfering in someone else's politics", but there is no evidence he will shy away from doing so. He has a history of interventionism, and it is unclear whether the lessons of Mr Obama's Brexit intervention have been learned.

Meanwhile, Mr Biden's comments betrayed the strong personal feelings, and Irish roots, that colour his view of Brexit. He was always against it, continues to lament it and, going forward, holds the ultimate leverage of a trade deal over the UK.

It is notable that Mr Biden's remarks were made off-the-cuff as he left The Queen, a theatre in Wilmington, Delaware, where he set up base in his campaign and frequently holds meetings.

He answers few questions but, when an Irish reporter shouted out, he responded enthusiastically: "You can ask about Ireland all you want!"

The US president-elect went on to give a much lengthier answer than he did on subsequent questions about the pandemic or when he would get his first intelligence briefing.

In Downing Street ,hey might prefer that he concentrates on that.