Starmer to hold talks with other global leaders to discuss response to Trump tariffs, says No 10 – UK politics live | Politics

Starmer to hold talks with other global leaders this weekend to discuss response to Trump tariffs, No 10 says

Keir Starmer will be speaking to international leaders this weekend to discuss how they should respond to the Trump tariffs.

Speaking to journalists at the morning lobby briefing, the PM’s spokesperson would not give details of who the prime minister would be consulting, but he said the conversations were prompted by the need to work “even more closely” with allies in the light of what President Trump is doing.

The spokesperson said:

We are very much aware that the global economic landscape is shifting. It means we have a responsibility to work even more closely with other countries to maintain stability and strengthen our partnerships abroad.

And you’ll see the prime minister engaging with international leaders over the weekend on this.

The spokesperson also reminded reporters of what Starmer said yesterday, when he said the Trump tariffs were not “a short-term tactical exercise”, but the start of a “new era”.

Asked if Starmer favoured the sort of approach proposed by Jim O’Neill this morning – the non-US working together to deepen free trade, sidelining Washington (see 10.36am) – the spokesperson replied:

What the prime minister is concentrating on is his engagement with our global partners, and you will see evidence of that this weekend.

But, as we’ve said before, we will be maintaining a cool, headed and pragmatic approach, and one that is grounded in our national interest.

The spokesperson claimed government policies already in the pipeline showed that it was adapting to new circumstances. He said:

The global economic landscape is shifting and we need to shift with it. And, as you’ve already seen, through overhauling our planning system, bringing forward our industrial strategy and cutting excess red tape, we already embracing that new area and ready to tackle it.

The spokesperson also said the government would be “turbocharging” its work to deliver stability and created growth, and that Starmer would be saying more about this “in the coming days”.

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Some news away from the continuing fallout from Trump’s tariff announcement. Politico is reporting that the UK is reviewing how it defends critical infrastructure such as undersea gas pipelines and data cables.

Protecting “critical undersea infrastructure” will be included in the government’s Strategic Defence Review (SDR), due to be completed by the end of the month, an MoD spokesperson confirmed to the outlet. It will assess the state of the armed forces, the threats the UK faces and the capabilities needed to combat them.

Keir Starmer last month announced significant cuts to Britain’s international aid budget to help pay for a major increase in defence spending.

The prime minister said the UK government would increase defence spending to 2.5% of GDP by 2027 – three years earlier than planned – as the Trump administration signalled it was no longer primarily focused on European security and that Europe would have to take the lead in defending Ukraine from Russian aggression.

Starmer has so far resisted pressure to boost defence spending to 3% of GDP, but some defence chiefs want him to go further, amid growing fears of sabotage and other forms of hybrid warfare by Russia.

Concerns over the potential sabotage of power cables, telecom links and gas pipelines have been increasing after a string of outages in the Baltic Sea following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

In January, the UK took the rare step of publicly naming a Russian vessel, the Yantar, as a spy ship operating in the North Sea.

Defence minister John Healey said Yantar, used for intelligence and mapping critical infrastructure on the sea floor, entered British waters on 20 January and the Royal Navy tracked it for two days until it entered Dutch waters.

European authorities are investigating several cases of damage to infrastructure under the Baltic Sea, including to a power cable linking Estonia and Finland. Finnish authorities detained a ship, suspected of being part of Russia’s “shadow fleet” used to avoid sanctions, after that cable and others were damaged.

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