US singer Taylor Swift

NEW YORK: Taylor
Swift, currently promoting the release of her latest album, has accused Donald
Trump of treating his White House reign as an "autocracy," in a new
political turn for the singer. "We're a democracy - at least, we're
supposed to be - where you're allowed to disagree, dissent, debate," the
pop star said in snippets of an interview teased Friday by The Guardian.
Speaking about the US president, the 29-year-old said, "I really think
that he thinks this is an autocracy."

In American
politics, Swift said, "all the dirtiest tricks in the book were used and
it worked." She described the current state of affairs as
"gaslighting the American public into being like, 'If you hate the president,
you hate America.'" Swift has faced criticism in the past for shying from
politics, especially in 2016 when she did not use her enormous platform to
endorse a candidate in the pivotal presidential vote.

Now she says she
is "remorseful" for not speaking up during that election, saying in
hindsight she would have backed Hillary Clinton. But Swift said at the time her
row with Kanye West and Kim Kardashian along with her mother's cancer diagnosis
had her keeping a low profile. "I was just trying to protect my mental
health - not read the news very much, go cast my vote, tell people to
vote," she said in the interview, set for full publication Saturday.

"I just knew
what I could handle and I knew what I couldn't. I was literally about to
break." Swift spoke out last October ahead of the 2018 midterm vote,
endorsing the Democrat running for US Senate in her home state of Tennessee and
citing the Republican candidate's poor record on women's rights. She told The
Guardian she would "do everything I can for 2020," pointing to
ongoing battles threatening a woman's right to choose the option of abortion.

Isolated Trump

Meanwhile, an
isolated President Donald Trump arrived yesterday for the G7 summit in Biarritz
bearing threats of tariffs against host France and a decision to deepen his
trade war with China, despite fears of US or even global recession. Trump
dislikes the kind of multilateral forums epitomized by the G7, insisting on a
policy of "America first" and his own skills, honed in a real estate
career, of one-to-one deal making.

Ahead of the
summit in the elegant French seaside resort, he has criticized most of his
partners, rowing with them over Iran, trade, global warming and Brexit. And on
the eve of his trip, he brushed aside concerns of global economic slowdown to
exchange new tariffs with China, insisting "we'll win." In another
piece of brinkmanship, he also confirmed right before departing on the Marine
One helicopter that he would retaliate against France's iconic wine exports if
President Emmanuel Macron didn't retreat on a new tax that will hit US digital
giants like Google.

"We'll be
taxing their wine like they've never seen before," he vowed. The other G7
leaders - from Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy and Japan - are waiting
for Trump with a mixture of alarm and resignation. Macron has even decided that
for the first time the G7 won't issue a group statement at the end of the
summit, given the extent of divisions. At last year's meeting in Canada, Trump
withdrew his signature in a fury at Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. It
would be "pointless," Macron said.

World economy at
stake?

Other G7 leaders
are already alarmed at the fallout from the escalating US-China trade war. But
Trump, bullish as ever, steeply ramped up tariffs against China on Friday after
Beijing slapped its own new tariffs against US products. Trump says he alone is
able to take on the Chinese after decades of intellectual property theft and a
slate of other unfair trading practices. He called the struggle "a little
spat." At the G7 he is expected to seek allies, but the other leaders are
deeply skeptical about whether Trump's crusade can ever succeed - or whether it
will tip a slowing world economy over the edge.

The first working
event of the G7 will be a session early Sunday that the White House
specifically asked at the "last minute" to be added to the agenda: a
meeting of the leaders on economic growth. Trump will tell his partners
"to write the rules for this century, in contrast to the unfair trade
practices that we see coming out of China," a senior administration
official told reporters. Trump will also urge the Europeans, Canada and Japan
to shake up their own economies along US lines. "You'll have the president
really engaging in honest conversations," the official said.

Cozy no more

Despite the
diplomatic storm clouds gathering over Biarritz, on the Atlantic coast, Trump
said the trip "will be very productive." But there are questions over
the future of the G7 as Trump's nationalist approach turns it into something
more like a 6+1. G7s always used to be cozy affairs, giving the leaders of
like-minded, capitalist democracies a chance to relax and talk frankly in the
context of largely shared values.

However, there is
increasingly little common ground between Trump and what would ordinarily be
among the closest of US allies. Yet another diplomatic hand grenade went off
days before the trip, when Trump reiterated his desire to recreate the G8
format with Russia, expelled in 2014 after Vladimir Putin's invasion of
Crimea.-  Agencies