Hillary Clinton has suggested Theresa May's Tory Government lacks "empathy" as she called for an end to the "divisive rhetoric and policy" that has emerged in the wake of Brexit.

The former US presidential hopeful, speaking in Swansea as she completes a tour of the UK, raised the issue of EU citizens' uncertain futures once Britain cuts ties with Brussels in 2019.

She also warned that children were being given “short shrift” in the Brexit process.

As she was presented with an honorary doctorate at Swansea University for her commitment to promoting the rights of families and children around the world, the former first lady said: “Teachers and schools are reporting an outbreak of bullying and racially motivated insults.

“Here in the UK, divisive rhetoric and policy shifts are having their own effects.

“Right now, the residency rights of half a million children, including many who were born in the UK, are hanging in the balance.

“So there are reports of children being worried, feeling uncertain, even unsafe. Trying to make sense of their places in the world.

“The children's commissioners for England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland have already raised concerns that children's interests are getting short shrift in the Brexit process.”

Ms Clinton said she continued to “believe in the value of the European Union”, but added: “What's missing in both of our countries at the moment it seems to me, and what we need more than anything else, is empathy.

“It should not only be at the centre of our individual lives, families and communities, but at the centre of our policy, politics and public lives.”

Some protesters gathered outside the campus ahead of Ms Clinton's visit.

The university's college of law was renamed The Hillary Rodham Clinton School of Law and she was presented with a book about her Welsh roots.

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Ms Clinton also took a swipe at the Trump administration, accusing political leaders of “stoking divisions” and saying that “anger and resentment” were underpinning the national conversation.

“The bonds of community that once united us are fraying. Too much of the current discourse on both sides of the Atlantic is dominated by a zero-sum view of life, which argues that if someone else is gaining, I must be losing,” she said.

“The measure of any society is how we treat the most vulnerable among us, especially our children.

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“And when we lose empathy, when it does become everyone for themselves, children are the first to suffer.

“Just look at my own country where currents of anger and resentment are underpinning our national conversation.