
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


A defection, a photocopied resignation, and an airborne crisis: welcome to politics in 2026.
In this week’s episode of Mid-Atlantic, Royfield Brown leads a transatlantic panel through the latest signs of fracture on the British right and a chaotic shift in U.S. foreign policy. Robert Jenrick’s defection from the Conservatives to Reform UK is dissected not as a grand ideological realignment, but as a cynical career move amid a floundering party machine. Corey Bernard and Tanya Altrade offer little sympathy, framing the departure as more “photocopier farce” than political earthquake, while Logan Phillips warns of what happens when short-termism becomes the only strategy left standing.
Attention then pivots to Washington, where Trump’s erratic foreign policy has turned the Monroe Doctrine into something far more impulsive—and combustible. From the disastrous optics of promising support to Iranian protesters (then ghosting them), to the bizarre muscle-flexing over Greenland, Logan paints a picture of a White House driven by ego, not doctrine. As European troops cautiously land in Greenland and NATO solidarity is tested in real-time, the panel reflects on the geopolitical aftershocks of U.S. unpredictability.
The episode closes on a lighter note—sort of—with Gregorian chants, Game of Thrones hypotheticals, and Roy Field’s lament that YouTube might be eating TV’s lunch… and possibly dinner.
Selected Quotes:
“Robert Jenrick left the Conservative Party because he saw no future in it, only a future for himself elsewhere.” — Corey Bernard“Farage is not anti-establishment. He’s just mad the establishment won’t let him in.” — Tanya Altrade“Americans want to be the big dog, but not the bully. Trump makes that distinction hard.” — Logan Phillips“We’re living in a world shaped by how Donald Trump’s father treated him.” — Corey BernardFurther Reading & Links Mentioned:
Next Episode Preview:
Join us next time as Mid-Atlantic shifts to YouTube—bringing panelist beards, political insights, and probably more broadband-related complaints into full 4K view.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Roifield Brown4.8
6363 ratings
A defection, a photocopied resignation, and an airborne crisis: welcome to politics in 2026.
In this week’s episode of Mid-Atlantic, Royfield Brown leads a transatlantic panel through the latest signs of fracture on the British right and a chaotic shift in U.S. foreign policy. Robert Jenrick’s defection from the Conservatives to Reform UK is dissected not as a grand ideological realignment, but as a cynical career move amid a floundering party machine. Corey Bernard and Tanya Altrade offer little sympathy, framing the departure as more “photocopier farce” than political earthquake, while Logan Phillips warns of what happens when short-termism becomes the only strategy left standing.
Attention then pivots to Washington, where Trump’s erratic foreign policy has turned the Monroe Doctrine into something far more impulsive—and combustible. From the disastrous optics of promising support to Iranian protesters (then ghosting them), to the bizarre muscle-flexing over Greenland, Logan paints a picture of a White House driven by ego, not doctrine. As European troops cautiously land in Greenland and NATO solidarity is tested in real-time, the panel reflects on the geopolitical aftershocks of U.S. unpredictability.
The episode closes on a lighter note—sort of—with Gregorian chants, Game of Thrones hypotheticals, and Roy Field’s lament that YouTube might be eating TV’s lunch… and possibly dinner.
Selected Quotes:
“Robert Jenrick left the Conservative Party because he saw no future in it, only a future for himself elsewhere.” — Corey Bernard“Farage is not anti-establishment. He’s just mad the establishment won’t let him in.” — Tanya Altrade“Americans want to be the big dog, but not the bully. Trump makes that distinction hard.” — Logan Phillips“We’re living in a world shaped by how Donald Trump’s father treated him.” — Corey BernardFurther Reading & Links Mentioned:
Next Episode Preview:
Join us next time as Mid-Atlantic shifts to YouTube—bringing panelist beards, political insights, and probably more broadband-related complaints into full 4K view.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

527 Listeners

283 Listeners

70 Listeners

151 Listeners

8 Listeners

16 Listeners

128 Listeners

13 Listeners

696 Listeners

6,308 Listeners

1,045 Listeners

771 Listeners

105 Listeners

15,859 Listeners

3,555 Listeners

1,167 Listeners

819 Listeners

391 Listeners

2,361 Listeners

1,270 Listeners