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Starmer: UK does not need to choose between US and EU

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Starmer: UK does not need to choose between US and EU

Speaking at the Lord Mayor’s Banquet in London’s Guildhall, an annual event held by the City of London Corporation and where the PM traditionally speaks on international issues, Sir Keir set out how the UK would now “stand tall on the world stage”.

“Against the backdrop of these dangerous times, the idea that we must choose between our allies, that somehow we’re with either America or Europe, is plain wrong,” he said.

“I reject it utterly. Attlee did not choose between allies. Churchill did not choose.

“The national interest demands that we work with both.”

There’s long been speculation US president-elect Donald Trump may launch a trade war against Europe and reduce support for Ukraine, even Nato.

In such circumstances, analysts suggest Britain would come under pressure from the US and Europe to take sides.

Sir Keir praised the incoming US leader as gracious, adding that he told him during their meeting in New York in September that the UK “will invest more deeply than ever in this transatlantic bond with our American friends in the years to come”.

The PM also repeated his promise to rebuild and renew ties with Europe, which he said were vital to Britain’s security and prosperity.

Sir Keir insisted it is “deeply in our self-interest” to support Ukraine against Russian president Vladimir Putin because “the future of freedom in Europe is being decided today”.

The UK is now “determined to fight harder on the world stage for our national interests and ready to dig deeper to defend them”, he said, because a win for Putin would damage “our own security, stability and prosperity”.

“So we must continue to back Ukraine and do what it takes to support their self-defence for as long as it takes,” he said.

Supporting allies was what former prime ministers Clement Attlee and Winston Churchill had done, he said, adding that he thought of the Attlee government of 1945 and its ambition to build “a country fit for heroes”.

“And they saw that maintaining our strength abroad gave us the foundation to succeed at home. That is as true today as it was then,” he said.

Now was the time, Sir Keir said, to “strengthen our security as the bedrock on which the economy rests – and the ultimate guarantor of everything we hold dear”.

Such words may be tested come January if the US imposes tariffs on European goods and demands the continent trades less with China, all while forcing Ukraine to cede territory.

However, Conservative Party co-chair Nigel Huddlestone said it was Sir Keir’s government that had “set our country back” since Labour took power five months ago.

He said: “From driving business confidence to near-record lows, working people punished with a jobs tax, growth projections slashed, and a dash to surrender British interests overseas – it’s no wonder he’s been forced into a desperate reset.”

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