Mass migration has left London, England, and Paris, France, unrecognizable, Donald Trump told supporters at a Wisconsin rally on Wednesday. “We’ve seen what happened when Europe opened its doors to jihad. Look at Paris, look at London; they’re no longer recognizable,” he said.
The former president predicted he was “going to get myself into a lot of trouble with the folks in Paris and the folks in London, but you know what, that’s the fact.”
“They are no longer recognizable, and we can’t let that happen to our country,” he stressed.
London has been governed by Mayor Sadiq Khan of the left-wing Labour Party since 2016. He is standing for a third consecutive term on Thursday, in a year that has already seen Muslim residents riot during Eid, Ramadan lights displayed in the street, and ‘Hadiths of the Day’ displayed in railway stations over Easter and Lent.
Knife crime in London, where White Britons now account for just 36.8 percent of residents, is up seven percent year-on-year and 81 percent over the last ten years. Muslim anti-Israel protestors called openly for “jihad” on the streets of the British capital after the October 7 terror attacks on Israel last year, but the local police force defended them.
Across Britain, almost 50 percent of Muslims across Britain poll as sympathetic to Hamas. Conservative lawmakers, following National Pulse editor-in-chief Raheem Kassam, have begun warning of the emergence of no-go zones.
Paris has undergone a similar demographic transformation and also faces a long-term increase in crime. The capital saw 97 public rapes in 2023, resulting in just 36 arrests. Seventy-seven percent of those arrested were foreign nationals. Last year, ethnic riots rocked the city after police shot an Algerian teen who drove a car at police officers during a gunpoint traffic stop.
Trump says London and Paris are "no longer recognizable." Where's the lie? pic.twitter.com/kOcrnhRwtN
— Jack Montgomery (@JackBMontgomery) May 2, 2024