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UK Leader Criticizes Trump Remarks Blaming ‘Both Sides’

Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May talks with Commodore Jerry Kyd (2L), Captain of the 65,000-tonne British aircraft carrier HMS Queen Elizabeth, during her tour of the ship, after it arrived at Portsmouth Naval base, its new home port, in Portsmouth, southern England on August 16, 2017. The ship measures 280 metres (920 feet) long -- the equivalent of 28 London buses or nearly three times the length of Buckingham Palace -- and 56 metres from keel to masthead. / AFP PHOTO / POOL AND AFP PHOTO / Ben STANSALL

British Prime Minister Theresa May has criticized President Donald Trump’s remarks blaming “both sides” in weekend violence between white supremacists and counter-demonstrators in Virginia, declaring that there’s “no equivalence” between the two groups.

Britain’s leader, speaking in Portsmouth on Wednesday at the unveiling of the nation’s new aircraft carrier, rebuffed Trump’s comments, underscoring that she saw “no equivalence between those who propound fascist views and those who oppose them.”

She did not criticize the U.S. president by name, but said it was incumbent upon leaders to counter far-right views “wherever we hear them.”

Other senior politicians in Britain have also criticized Trump. Scottish Conservatives leader Ruth Davidson tweeted that Trump had defended “Nazis, fascists and racists. For shame.”