Boris Johnson has described working with US President Joe Biden as “a big breath of fresh air” following the pair’s first face-to-face meeting.
The prime minister met Donald Trump’s successor in Carbis Bay on Thursday, ahead of this week’s G7 summit at the Cornwall resort.
Mr Johnson said the new US administration had “so much they want to do together”, including on NATO and climate change – subjects on which Mr Biden has dramatically different viewpoints to Mr Trump.
And the prime minister also suggested a possibly strained conversation with the US president over post-Brexit arrangements in Northern Ireland had been avoided, as he hailed the “common ground” between the UK, US and EU on preserving the Good Friday Agreement.
It follows reports Mr Biden’s administration had accused Mr Johnson’s government of “inflaming” tensions during an ongoing row between the UK and EU over the implementation of the Northern Ireland Protocol.
After the pair’s discussions, which lasted around an hour and 20 minutes, Mr Johnson said: “The talks were great, they went on for a long time, we covered a huge range of subjects.
“It’s wonderful to listen to the Biden administration and to Joe Biden, because there’s so much they want to do together with us, from security, NATO, to climate change.
“And it’s fantastic, it’s a breath of fresh air.”
Asked whether the US president – who has often spoken about his Irish roots – had made his alarm about the situation in Northern Ireland clear, Mr Johnson replied: “No he didn’t.
“But what I can say is America, the US, Washington, the UK – plus the EU – have one thing we absolutely all want to do; that is to uphold the Belfast Good Friday Agreement and make sure we keep the balance of the peace process going.
“That’s absolutely common ground and I’m optimistic we can do that.”
Mr Johnson and Mr Biden had been due to meet at Saint Michael’s Mount, an historic castle on a tidal island off the coast of Cornwall.
Reports suggested their wives, Carrie Johnson and Jill Biden, were due to have a tour of the island while the leaders held talks.
But a Number 10 source earlier confirmed the visit to Saint Michael’s Mount was “sadly off due to the weather” and the talks were rearranged to Carbis Bay, where the G7 summit will be held between Friday and Sunday.
Prior to their meeting, Mr Johnson, Mr Biden and their wives stood together to enjoy the view across the bay.
“It’s gorgeous, I don’t want to go home,” Mr Biden said.
And, after Dr Biden and Mrs Johnson left the two leaders, the US president revealed how he told the prime minister “we have something in common, we both married way above our station”.
Newlywed Mr Johnson replied that he was “not going to dissent from that point, I’m not going to disagree with the president there”.
“Or indeed on anything else, I think it highly likely,” he added.
Dr Biden – who enjoyed time on the beach on Thursday with Mrs Johnson and her baby Wilfred – wore a jacket embroidered with the word “LOVE” on the back, an item the first lady previously wore at the kickoff rally of her husband’s presidential campaign in 2019.
Asked about her outfit, Dr Biden said: “I think that we’re bringing love from America.
“This is a global conference and we’re trying to bring unity across the globe and I think that’s important right now – that people feel a sense of unity… feel a sense of hope after this year of the pandemic.”
Some immediately drew comparisons between Dr Biden’s jacket and her predecessor as first lady, Melania Trump, who wore a green jacket that said, “I Really Don’t Care, Do U?” on a 2018 trip to a Texas border town to visit migrant children housed in shelters.
Before getting to the substance of their talks, Mr Biden and Mr Johnson had inspected documents related to the Atlantic Charter, a declaration signed by Winston Churchill and Franklin D Roosevelt in August 1941 that set out common goals for the world after the Second World War.
And, following their discussions, it was announced the US and UK had agreed a “New Atlantic Charter” to build upon the commitments and aspirations set out 80 years ago.