No 10 takes relaxed view as Biden removes Churchill bust from Oval Office
UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson's official spokes man said that the Oval Office is the president's private office and it is up to the president to decorate it as he wishes
Downing Street has said it is up to President Biden how he decorates the Oval Office, after it was reported that a bust of Winston Churchill, lent by the UK government, has been removed.
UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson's official spokes man said that the Oval Office is the president's private office and it is up to the president to decorate it as he wishes, reports the Guardian.
Boris Johnson's official spokesman said, "We're in no doubt about the importance President Biden places on the UK-US relationship, and the prime minister looks forward to having that close relationship with him."
Johnson's relaxed attitude is in marked contrast to his criticism of Barack Obama, when the former president moved the Churchill bust aside.
Writing in the Sun in 2016, Johnson, then London mayor, and the author of a Churchill biography, called Obama's decision a "snub," suggesting it may have been because of "the part-Kenyan president's ancestral dislike of the British empire", reports the Guardian.
A bust of Mexican American labour rights leader Cesar Chavez was visible in pictures of Biden signing executive orders on Wednesday.
The prime minister, who was referred to by President Trump as "Britain Trump", is keen to strike up a strong working relationship with the socially liberal Biden, who the government hopes will attend the G7 meeting in Cornwall in June, reports the Guardian.
Johnson's spokesman was forced to field a string of questions about whether Johnson is "woke", after the shadow foreign secretary, Lisa Nandy, described Biden as a "woke guy," referring to his support for Black Lives Matter and trans rights.
Asked about her comments on Wednesday, Johnson appeared uncomfortable, before remarking that there was, "nothing wrong with being woke".
When the prime minister's spokesman was asked whether Johnson would consider himself "woke", he said: "You would have to define that, but you've got the PM's views on what he believes, and specifically on his agenda to level up across the country, and ensure that everybody has the opportunity to succeed."
The Conservatives believe publicly rejecting socially liberal policies such as the removal of historic statues with colonial connections will help them to score points over Labour, reports the Guardian.
The communities secretary, Robert Jenrick, has said he will legislate to prevent historic statues being removed, "at the hand of the flash mob" or by a "cultural committee of town hall militants and woke worthies".
Johnson's remarks about Obama, made during the build-up to the Brexit referendum, caused a furore. It subsequently emerged that Obama had simply moved the bust of the wartime leader – a loan from the UK government – to a spot in his personal residence, reports the Guardian.
When Theresa May rushed to Washington in early 2017 to be the first world leader to visit Donald Trump in the White House, he swept her into the Oval Office to show that Churchill had been restored to prominence.