U.Ok. Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Wednesday blasted as "disgraceful" the scenes of President Donald Trump's supporters storming the U.S. Capitol and careworn for the necessity for an orderly switch of energy to President-elect Joe Biden. "Disgraceful scenes in U.S. Congress," wrote Johnson, who has maintained a tenuous relationship with Trump throughout their management tenures. "America stands for democracy around the globe and it’s now very important that there needs to be a peaceable and orderly switch of energy." His assertion got here as different world leaders reacted to the surprising scenes, together with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who mentioned in an announcement, "we're involved and we're following the scenario minute by minute," and added, "I feel the American democratic establishments are robust, and hopefully every thing will return to regular shortly.""We should name this out for what it’s: a deliberate assault on Democracy by a sitting President & his supporters, trying to overturn a free & honest election! The world is watching!" Simon Coveney, the Irish minister for protection and for overseas affairs, wrote on Twitter. "We hope for restoration of calm." Johnson's publish got here moments after protesters stormed the U.S. Capitol because the Home and Senate met to debate certifying Biden because the winner of the presidential election. It additionally got here just a few hours after the tip of a rally organized by Trump during which the outgoing president repeated unfounded claims concerning the election and urged Republican lawmakers to overturn the end result – which they legally can not – ending his remarks with "let's stroll down Pennsylvania Avenue."A number of lawmakers and analysts lamented the pictures of armed protesters violently overtaking the seat of U.S. authorities – what Biden later referred to as "the citadel of liberty" – and pointed to maybe irreparable injury to future U.S. efforts to advocate for good authorities and peaceable transfers of energy overseas."Jogged my memory of movies I recorded of protesters breaching into the Governorate constructing of Mosul again in 2013," wrote Iraqi historian Omar Mohammed.