POLL OF THE DAY: Should the West negotiate with Putin? YOUR VERDICT

POLL OF THE DAY: Should the West negotiate with Putin? YOUR VERDICT

Tucker Carlson
Oliver Trapnell

By Oliver Trapnell


Published: 10/02/2024

- 08:00

Updated: 10/02/2024

- 19:07

Vladimir Putin recently sat down with Tucker Carlson for a 2-hour interview

GB News readers have narrowly voted against the West negotiating with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

In the latest membership poll, 572 readers cast their votes and the margin was fairly close.


No ended up with a narrow victory of 57 per cent to 42 per cent, with one per cent of respondents not knowing what answer to give.

The poll comes after Putin suggested he is open to negotiating with the US over the war in Ukraine as he sat down with US journalist Tucker Carlson.

GB News readers narrowly decided the West should not negotiate with Vladimir Putin

GB News readers narrowly decided the West should not negotiate with Vladimir Putin

GB NEWS

In the lengthy interview, which lasted more than two hours, the Russian leader told Carlson that he has “never refused negotiations” and would welcome efforts from Washington to discuss a peace agreement with Ukraine.

Putin has previously expressed a desire to negotiate after Russian forces suffered heavy losses in 2022 following Ukrainian counteroffensives.

However, Western officials have expressed concern at Putin’s demand that Ukraine not be included in Nato and to hold onto Ukrainian territory currently under the control of Russia.

Putin said: “We hear all the time, ‘Is Russia ready?’ Yes.

“We have not refused. It was them [the West] who publicly refused.”

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Following the interview, GB News’ Nigel Farage suggested the West should be more open to negotiating with the Kremlin.

Farage said: “After what was said last night, [Russia is] not going to stop and they’re switching vast amounts of their industrial production in Russia towards defence, they will never give up on this.

“Now we can find much of what’s happening abhorrent, but the thing that shocked me all the way through has been the absolute reluctance of anyone to think, shouldn’t we at least be having some form of negotiations?”

However, former defence minister Tobias Ellwood, said Farage’s view was “dangerous, defeatist and unpatriotic”.

Ellwood continued: “It also fails to understand the bigger picture of where our world is heading.

“Other adversaries, particularly China, will take note of our inability to remain committed and will take full advantage.”

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