Politics

Express digs up Patrick Stewart’s ‘miserable Brexit whinge’ because Star Trek aired on Film4

The Express – seemingly forgetting that we’ve left the EU, so get over it – dug up an old interview given by Patrick Stewart as Star Trek Generations aired on Film4.

Bemoaning the actor for his “miserable whinge about Brexit”, the newspaper unearthed a conversation with PA Media in which he expressed his frustration at the vote to leave, describing it as the “grimmest thing” to have happened to him in his political experience.

Sir Patrick said the vote is something that “makes me very, very sad”.

He continued: “I think what is happening with the European Union is actually the saddest, grimmest thing that has happened to me since I have been involved in politics.”

His confession wasn’t the first time that Sir Patrick would air his grievances with the political system, not only in the UK but in the US.

In an interview with Esquire in 2020, the Yorkshire-born legend described the ongoing presidency of then-US leader Donald Trump as “very disturbing”.

He compared it to the UK’s situation with prime minister Boris Johnson, who he noted he’d previously “always enjoyed when he was Mayor London because he was witty”, yet wasn’t someone who “should be in Downing Street”.

The Golden Globe nominee said: “It’s especially dismaying because it seems to me that in many cases, the people who voted for Boris Johnson, and the people who voted for Donald Trump, are the ones who are in the long run going to suffer the most from what’s happening.”

Express readers were unhappy with his comments, with one saying it was a “democratic vote so accept it”.

Another added: “The man is utopian europhile and should keep his trap shut”, while a third person said: “I wish they would beam him up back to lefty land where he belongs.”

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Jack Peat

Jack is a business and economics journalist and the founder of The London Economic (TLE). He has contributed articles to VICE, Huffington Post and Independent and is a published author. Jack read History at the University of Wales, Bangor and has a Masters in Journalism from the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne.

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Tags: Brexit