Most Labour Members Want Keir Starmer Replaced As Leader Before Next Election

Most Labour members want Keir Starmer to be replaced as party leader before the next general election, a damning new poll has found.

The Survation analysis for the LabourList website found that 53% believe a new leader should be in charge the next time voters go to the polls.

Only 31% back Starmer still being leader then, despite the party winning a landslide election victory just 15 months ago.

The grim findings for the prime minister were revealed as Labour members begin to gather in Liverpool for the party’s annual conference.

They increase the pressure on Starmer to use the event to convince his critics that he can turn around the government’s fortunes.

He will make his keynote speech on Tuesday, in which he is expected to set out his vision for the UK’s future and say he is in a “battle for the soul of the country” against Nigel Farage and Reform UK.

On Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg on BBC1, the PM insisted he needed more time to improve living standards, the NHS and national security.

He said: “I just need the space to get on and do what we need to do, to do those three things above all else, but also – in a world which is more volatile than any of us have known for a very long time – to ensure that the United Kingdom is safe and secure.

“We have got the fight of our lives ahead of us, because we’ve got to take on Reform, we’ve got to beat them.

“So now is not the time for introspection or navel-gazing. There is a fight that we are all in together and every single member of our party and our movement, actually everyone who cares about what this country is, whether they vote Labour or otherwise, it’s the fight of our lives for who we are as a country. We need to be in that fight united, not navel-gazing.”

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Keir Starmer Is Set To Formally Recognise A Palestinian State. Here’s Why That Matters

Keir Starmer is set to formally announce the UK’s recognition of a Palestinian state today.

Britain will then be joining France, Canada and Australia who will all acknowledge the State of Palestine officially at the United Nations’ General Assembly on Monday.

The state encompasses two separate territories, the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, and the Gaza Strip, all of which are currently known as the Occupied Palestinian Territories.

It comes after Israel failed to meet the conditions the UK set out – taking “substantive steps to end the appalling situation in Gaza”, reaching a ceasefire, ending the annexation in the West Bank and committing to a long-term two-state solution – all of which Starmer said would lead him to drop his recognition plan plan.

Instead, Israel has continued with its violent offensive in Gaza, which has already killed more than 65,000 people in the enclave.

It also comes after a UN commission of inquiry concluded Israel had committed genocide against Palestinians in Gaza, although Israel said that was “distorted and false”.

While the decision has been welcomed by Palestinians, Israel is reportedly considering options in response to the UK’s decision.

Here’s what you need to know.

What does it mean to recognise Palestine as a state?

According to the Montevideo Convention of 1933, to be recognised as a state, Palestine needs to have a permanent population, a defined territory, an effective government and international relations and formal diplomatic processes.

But Starmer is yet to confirm where he believes those exact borders are or who will run the new state – two highly contentious issues.

Gaza is currently run by the Hamas militants, who initiated the October 7 attack on Israel in 2023, killed 1,200 people and took 250 people hostage.

Starmer has insisted he does not want them to be in power, but it remains unclear who will take over.

The UK has also indicated it wants to move towards a peace deal which would recognise Palestine based on the 1967 borders, but Israel has encroached on more Palestinian land in the decades since then.

Still, it is more of a symbolic move than anything else, as it legitimises Palestinians’ rights to hold onto their land in Gaza, annexed east Jerusalem and the West Bank.

It also undermines Israel’s ongoing push to remove Palestinians from the region, especially as the UK is an Israeli ally.

It’s a notable break from past UK foreign policy, as multiple governments have ruled that recognition should be part of the peace process and implemented at a time of maximum impact.

Labour now says it is a moral responsibility to show long-term peace is possible amid struggling efforts to secure a ceasefire.

Out of 193 United Nations member states, 147 already recognise Palestine as a state around the world, including more than a dozen in Europe.

But France, China and Russia are the only other permanent members of the UN Security Council to already take this diplomatic step.

How have Palestinians reacted?

Palestinians have been pushing to be an independent state ever since Israel’s occupation in the 1967 Six-Day war.

The Palestinian Authority’s foreign minister, Varsen Aghabekian, told Sky News that this move was “better later than never”.

“Britain, with its weight, can influence other countries to come forward and recognise, because this is the right thing to do,” she said.

She said Britain was taking a “courageous step at a very difficult time”.

But she added that she is “very angry” with the States for its “unwavering support for Israel” and that Israel’s decision not to pass on tax revenue was pushing Palestinian civil society to the brink of “collapse”.

She also said recognising Palestine was not a reward for Hamas, but “if we wait until Israel decides it wants to go into negotiations with the Palestinians then it won’t happen”.

Aghabekian added that Mahmoud Abbas, the leader of the Palestinian Authority which governs the West Bank, has “given guarantees in letters to various leaders around the globe that said Hamas will not be part of the governance of the Gaza Strip”.

Yet she also revealed that it was “not reasonable” to try to completely erase Hamas, as it is an “ideology”.

What is Israel’s reaction?

Israel has refused to give into the UK’s demands, claiming it would reward the Hamas militants, who still hold 48 hostages – 20 of whom are thought to still be alive.

Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu previously said recognising Palestine would be “rewarding terror”.

Family members of those captives also wrote an open letter to Starmer on Saturday, urging him not to make the step until they are released.

They said this has “dramatically complicated efforts to bring home our loved ones. Hamas has already celebrated the UK’s decision as a victory and reneged on a ceasefire deal.”

What happens next?

This is a symbol more than anything else, so there is unlikely to be an immediate impact – but it does strengthen the Palestinian cause, especially as the UK is actually an Israeli ally.

The UK is also expected to declare new sanctions on Hamas later today.

However, Israel’s strongest ally, the US, seems unlikely to follow suit.

In the UK this week, Donald Trump told reporters that Palestinian recognition was one of the “few” areas he and Starmer disagree.

As long as the White House continues to offer its unwavering military support for Israel, it’s unclear how this declaration from the UK will alter the devastating situation on the ground in Gaza right now.

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Trump Ignores Protests Against His UK Presence, Insisting Britain ‘Warms My Heart’

Donald Trump apparently overlooked all the protests against his state visit to the UK when he touched down in central London last night.

The US president told reporters on Air Force One that his whistle-stop tour was going to “a beautiful event” and urged them to “enjoy yourselves, OK?”

Initially greeted by home secretary Yvette Cooper at Stansted, he and first lady Melania Trump were then whisked off to the US ambassador’s property in Regent’s Park and told broadcasters: “A lot of things here, they warm my heart.”

“Relationships are great,” he said, adding that the King has been a “friend of mine for a long time, and everybody respects him, they love him”.

But there are plenty of reasons this could turn into a rather gloomy affair, which the government – and the Royal Family – will desperately be trying to keep out of sight of the mercurial president while they woo him with pomp and ceremony.

Trump is yet to mention the sudden sacking of the UK’s ambassador to the US Peter Mandelson last week, when new details about his relationship with late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein were revealed.

To make matters worse, Trump himself has been fighting off criticisms over his own friendship with Epstein from his own MAGA fanbase in recent months.

And coming to Britain is evidently not the best way for him to escape the scandal: four protesters were arrested for projecting a photo of Trump and Epstein onto the wall of Windsor Castle last night.

Climate demonstrators also interrupted a dinner for Republicans in Windsor last night, challenging Trump’s famous “drill baby drill” mentality.

Holding banners which read, “oil money kills”, and beating drums, they shouted: “How many will you kill if you drill, baby, drill?”

According to The Independent, male guests appeared to forcibly remove the protesters.

Another protest, organised by the Stop Trump Coalition, is expected to gather at 2pm today, and start a 5pm rally in Parliament Square.

Around 1,600 police officers have been deployed to keep an eye on the demonstrations.

Still, Starmer will be hoping he can distract the president with flashy shows of grandeur with this “unprecedented” state visit.

Trump will be met by the Prince and Princess of Wales on Wednesday morning in Windsor, before being welcomed to the castle by King Charles and Queen Camilla.

The Palace is also set to unveil the largest military ceremony ever organised for a state visit in living memory, with a joint RAF and US air Force flypast and a Red Arrows demonstration.

While Trump is here for a good time, Starmer will be trying to get some politics done – and the government already announced a “tech prosperity deal” last night, which will be revealed in its entirety on Thursday when the leaders meet at Chequers.

Pressure is on Starmer to reduce US tariffs on steel and aluminium, too, but that plan seems to have been put on the backburner for now.

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7 Contentious Issues To Keep An Eye On During Trump’s State Visit

Keir Starmer thought he had secured a royal flush when he offered Donald Trump an “unprecedented” invitation for a second state visit earlier this year.

Now the big occasion has officially rolled around and the timing couldn’t be worse for the prime minister.

Any visit from the divisive Republican, who is pretty unpopular in the UK, presents a rather tense moment for the British politicians who have to host him.

But Starmer’s most unpredictable ally is now coming to town just as Downing Street is beset by problems coming from all sides.

Here’s a look at some of the issues most likely to trip up the prime minister during Trump’s hurried 48-hour stay.

1. Relations with Epstein

Trump has been trying desperately to dampen down questions around his past links to the late convicted sex offender over in the US, but fresh revelations continue to revive questions around their friendship and have made it across the pond.

A political campaign group called Everyone Hates Elon unveiled a huge picture of Trump and Epstein outside of Windsor Castle on Monday, ahead of his visit.

Epstein’s ongoing legacy has sent waves across the UK in recent days too.

Starmer sacked his US ambassador, Labour grandee Lord Peter Mandelson, last week.

It came after newly-released emails from 2008 revealed Mandelson had called for Epstein’s 18-month prison sentence for soliciting a child for prostitution to be challenged.

Starmer said: “Had I know then what I know now, I’d have never appointed him.”

Trump, who had a strong bond with Mandelson, was allegedly displeased Starmer did not inform him of the ambassador’s sacking personally.

Both men are likely to face very difficult questions about the issue during their joint press conference on Thursday.

2. Starmer’s domestic struggles

Trump is known for seeing himself as a “winner”, and is keen to surround himself with other supposed victors – including Starmer, who won the general election on a landslide – even if they don’t align politically.

But just over a year later, the PM is now facing repeated questions about his future in the role – could Trump subsequently be about to cool on Starmer?

After 12 months of unpopular policies like cuts to welfare and international aid, the prime minister tried to turn over a new page on September 1, promising a period of “delivery, delivery, delivery”.

However, the scandal around Angela Rayner’s second property and her subsequent resignation, the sacking of Mandelson and the abrupt departure from Starmer’s director of political strategy Paul Ovenden over resurfaced messages about Diane Abbott mean the PM looking especially weak right now.

Even his own MPs are questioning whether he will last in the post until Christmas.

3. Anti-Trump protests

Those opposed to the US president are hoping to put together an even bigger demonstration against him after the Tommy Robinson-led far-right march at the weekend.

They are set to gather outside Windsor Castle from 5.30pm today, although Trump will not be visiting the royal residence until Wednesday morning – but protesters are hope he sees it on the media.

Meanwhile, Lib Dem leader Ed Davey will show his own frustration at Trump’s appearance by boycotting the state banquet tomorrow.

Similarly, Green Party MP Ellie Chowns has filed an Early Day Motion (EDM) saying Trump does not “deserve the honour of a second UK state visit”, due to the Epstein scandal.

She also criticised the use of US F-35 military jets in the flypast with the Red Arrows during the visit, as the planes are used in Israel on its war against Gaza.

She said: “State visits are honours; Trump doesn’t deserve one.”

Her motion was supported by seven other MPs including Jeremy Corbyn.

Starmer has timed the visit so it is during parliamentary recess, so MPs are not able to show their potential disdain for the president face-to-face – but Trump is known to be a keen newsreader, and could soon find out about the resistance to his presence here.

4. Question marks over free speech

The assassination of right-wing commentator and pro-MAGA campaigner Charlie Kirk last week has energised the international debate around the line between free speech and hate speechincluding by the Trump administration.

As the far-right rally at the weekend, known as the “Unite the Kingdom” march, demonstrated, there’s a growing body of people who claim free speech is under threat in the UK.

Former Trump adviser Elon Musk even appeared via video link to tell the crowds that “violence is coming” to the UK and to call for a “change of government in Britain”.

Even though – as cabinet ministers noted – the rally itself was proof that free speech is alive and well in the UK, there are fears Trump could revive this debate during his stay.

Demonstrators carry England and Union Jack flags during a Tommy Robinson-led Unite the Kingdom march and rally in London, Saturday Sept. 13, 2025.
Demonstrators carry England and Union Jack flags during a Tommy Robinson-led Unite the Kingdom march and rally in London, Saturday Sept. 13, 2025.

via Associated Press

5. Ongoing pressure over Ukraine

Away from the grandeur of the state visit, Starmer also wants to make some progress on stopping Russia’s war in Ukraine – with Trump’s help.

While the US president has repeatedly sided with Vladimir Putin in his quest to end the conflict, his frustration over Moscow’s refusal to come to the negotiating table seems to pushing him to finally align with his European allies.

Trump finally admitted that Russia was the aggressor in the war over the weekend and said he was willing to impose secondary sanctions on Moscow.

However, he claimed he would only do that if other Nato nations completely weaned its off Russia’s cheap fossil fuel exports.

Before the war, the EU got around 45% of its natural gas from Russia. That is expected to fall to around 13%, but that might not be far enough, according to Trump.

In what he called a letter to Nato allies, he said: “The purchase of Russian oil, by some, has been shocking! It greatly weakens your negotiating position, and bargaining power, over Russia.”

Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy has also demanded a “clear position” from Trump on ending the war, adding: “I very much hope he [Starmer] will be able to have a very specific discussion on the security guarantees of the US for Ukraine.”

6. Splits over the Middle East

The US secretary of state Marco Rubio is clearly not a fan of Labour’s plans to recognise a Palestinian state later this month during the UN’s General Assembly.

During a visit to Israel, he backed Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu and said the UK’s move would have “no impact whatsoever” on moving towards a two-state solution, and instead just “embolden Hamas.”

He claimed the UK, along with France, Canada, Australia and Belgium, were also doing this solely because of their domestic problems.

7. Trade and the economy

While Starmer did secure the first tariff deal with Trump earlier this year after his so-going “liberation day”, Britain still wants to get the US president’s ongoing penalties on steel and aluminium trade lifted.

But there’s allegedly little sign of a meeting between chancellor Rachel Reeves and her US counterpart Scott Bessent on that topic during this state visit.

Tech and energy deals are also expected to be announced during Trump’s trip, which may help power new AI data centres.

Bagpipers play as President Donald Trump and Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer arrive at Trump International Golf Links, near Aberdeen, Scotland, Monday, July 28, 2025.
Bagpipers play as President Donald Trump and Britain’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer arrive at Trump International Golf Links, near Aberdeen, Scotland, Monday, July 28, 2025.

via Associated Press

Starmer will have to do a delicate balancing act to make sure none of these sore spots threaten his strong relationship with the mercurial US president.

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Keir Starmer Makes Labour MP A Minister Just 24 Hours After Sacking Him

Keir Starmer has made a Labour MP a minister just 24 hours after sacking him from the cabinet.

Downing Street announced on Friday that Ian Murray had “left the government” after he was replaced as Scottish secretary by Douglas Alexander.

But in a remarkable turnaround, it was announced on Saturday that Murray, the MP for Edinburgh South, was being given two new ministerial jobs.

He will be a junior minister in both the Department of Culture, Media and Sport and the Department of Science, Innovation and Technology.

It is understood Starmer U-turned after his original decision to sack Murray sparked a furious backlash from Labour MPs.

Murray, the MP for Edinburgh South, was one of only two cabinet members to be ousted entirely from the prime minister’s top team during Friday’s reshuffle. The other was Commons leader Lucy Powell.

The announcement was greeted with shock by Labour figures, who believed Murray had been treated unfairly.

Relations between Murray and Morgan McSweeney, the PM’s chief of staff, have been strained since a Scottish Parliament by-election in Hamilton in June.

The pair fell out over Labour’s choice of candidate, who went on to defeat the SNP in a major upset.

Murray has been a Labour MP since 2010, and was the party’s only MP in Scotland between 2015 and 2017, and between 2019 and 2024.

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A US Ambassador Ranted About The UK After It Criticised Israel. This Labour MP Had Just 1 Thing To Say.

A Labour MP tore into Donald Trump’s ambassador to Israel this morning after he criticised the UK.

Mike Huckabee slammed Britain and prime minister Keir Starmer on X after the UK condemned Israel’s plan to expand its military operation in Gaza, despite the ongoing humanitarian crisis there.

Starmer joined many European allies in warning Israel that occupying Gaza City, the largest city in the Palestinian territory, would only cause further “bloodshed”, almost two years after Israel first declared war on Hamas.

In a statement on Friday, the prime minister said: “Wwe urge it to reconsider immediately. Every day the humanitarian crisis in Gaza worsens and hostages taken by Hamas are being held in appalling and inhuman conditions. We need a ceasefire now.”

But Huckabee replied by bizarrely talking about World War 2.

He wrote on X: “So Israel is expected to surrender to Hamas & feed them even though Israeli hostages are being starved?

“Did UK surrender to Nazis and drop food to them? Ever heard of Dresden, PM Starmer?

“That wasn’t food you dropped. If you had been PM then UK would be speaking German!”

In a second post, he added: “How much food has Starmer and the UK sent to Gaza? @IsraeliPM has already sent 2 MILLION TONS into Gaza & none of it even getting to hostages. Maybe UK PM ought to sit this one out & follow Arab League who said Hamas should disarm & release ALL hostages immediately.”

Huckabee’s analogy compares the current war in Gaza to the joint British and American decision to bomb the German city of Dresden in February 1945.

It was one of the most controversial moments from World War 2 because many argue the attack, which killed around 25,000 people was unnecessary and cruel – especially as it occurred just months before the conflict ended.

Meanwhile, Israel is coming under intense scrutiny for its war in Gaza where at least 60,000 Gazans have been killed, and Israel’s aid blockade is causing mass starvation.

So Emily Thornberry, the chair of the UK’s Foreign Affairs Committee and a former member of Starmer’s shadow cabinet, offered a no-nonsense response to Huckabee on X.

She wrote: “This Ambassador is clearly an idiot.”

Trump has tried to end the war in Gaza but has refused to commit to recognising a Palestinian state, unlike the UK, France and Canada.

Just days after he acknowledged that people are starving in the territory, the US president said it was Israel’s choice to expand its military offensive.

Trump told reporters: “That’s going to be pretty much up to Israel.”

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Is Labour Preparing Brits For A Tax Shock This Autumn?

Are our taxes about to go up?

That’s a question Brits will be hearing again and again ahead of Labour’s autumn Budget, where the government sets out its spending and tax plans for the year ahead.

Very rarely do ministers admit in any significant detail exactly what they have planned for the fiscal event – but early signs suggest that a tax hike just might be looming.

The occupants of 10 and 11 Downing Street are stuck between a rock and a hard place when it comes to the country’s finances right now.

Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves promised not to increase taxes on “working people” in the run-up to the general election last year.

While the exact definition of that phrase split public opinion, Labour said it means not raising income tax, employee national insurance or VAT.

Of course, that wording came back to haunt the government at last year’s Budget when they revealed they were hiking employers’ national insurance contributions – and critics swiftly pointed out that employers are “working people”, too.

Then the National Institute of Economic and Social Research (NIESR) think tank today predicted that Reeves will need to raise taxes to close a government spending gap on course to reach more than £40 billion.

This is due to unexpectedly sluggish economic growth – GDP grew by 0.7% in the first quarter of 2025 but contracted by 0.1% in May – and higher-than-expected inflation – at 3.6% in June.

To make matters worse, when Labour made its 2024 tax promises, it also pledged to oversee a period of significant economic growth which… has not really happened.

So perhaps it is no surprise the NIESR claimed Reeves is facing “an impossible trilemma” – sticking to her fiscal rules while fulfilling her spending commitments and upholding her manifesto pledge not to raise taxes for working people.

Tellingly, the prime minister refused to reiterate his commitment not to increase “working people” taxes on Wednesday.

He told reporters he did “not recognise” the NIESR’s figures, adding: “But the Budget won’t be until later in the year – that’s when we’ll have the forecast and set out our plans.”

He also steered the conversation away from taxes, telling reporters: “What’s really important is that I’m very clear about our focus, which will be on living standards and making sure that people feel better-off, partly because more money is coming into their pocket in the first place through better wages, and partly because we’re bearing down on costs like mortgages and other costs to everyday families.”

Tory donor and former deputy chair of the party, Lord Ashcroft, took that to mean there will be “another U-turn” on Labour’s promises coming soon.

But, increasing taxes on “working people” is not the only option for the government.

Those on the Labour left are calling for a wealth tax, although cabinet minister Jonathan Reynolds called the idea “daft” just last month.

Meanwhile, professor Stephen Millard, the NIESR’s deputy director for macroeconomics, told the BBC Radio 4′s Today programme that Reeves could look at reforming the council tax system.

“Houses have not been revalued since 1991. The system is ripe for a complete reform,” he said. “The question there is whether reforming the council tax system, getting it right, would necessarily raise any additional money.

“An alternative is to replace the whole thing with a land value tax, which is much fairer and which potentially could actually raise a significant amount of money.”

But just what will Labour choose to do to fix our unsteady finances? Right now, it seems like it is anybody’s guess – including Labour’s.

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Blow To Labour As Reform Voters Prefer Jeremy Corbyn To Keir Starmer On Almost Every Metric

Reform UK voters generally prefer Jeremy Corbyn to Keir Starmer, a surprising new poll has found.

As first reported by Novara Media, a survey of 2,000 UK adults – conducted by Merlin Strategy over the weekend – showed Reform voters believe the former Labour leader has better qualities than the current prime minister.

The poll showed 65% of respondents think Corbyn was more authentic, 67% said he was for working people, 57% think he was hardworking, 64% believe he’s honest and 54% say he’s intelligent.

A further 70% said they believe Corbyn makes radical decisions, 64% say he is principled, 69% say he represents change, 62% say he’s strong and 59% say he’s trustworthy.

And, crucially, 61% said they believe the Islington North MP understands “people like me”.

Starmer won on only one metric – he’s seen as better on the world stage than Corbyn.

However, the poll did not show whether or not this would push Farage supporters to actually vote for Corbyn’s new party.

Still, the research will be a real blow to the Labour government, considering it has moved away from hard-left policies touted by figures like Corbyn, in favour of winning back Reform voters.

The right-wing populist party has soared in popularity over the last year and now consistently leads in opinion polls by a healthy margin – despite having just four MPs.

So the government has been trying to win back that support.

Labour’s political director Claire Reynolds even told the party’s MPs in May that Reform UK voters are “our people”, but they’re just “pissed off” with the government right now.

It’s well-known that Starmer’s increasingly hardline anti-immigration policies have failed to cut through to Farage’s growing body of supporters – as Reform UK currently have a seven-point lead on Labour.

However, it will rub salt in the wound to know that Corbyn, Starmer’s predecessor who was expelled from the party over a row related to antisemitism, is more respected than the prime minister.

Starmer has tried to present it as a major strength that he moved Labour away from Corbyn’s policies after the party’s disastrous performance in the 2019 general election.

But, the Islington North MP is now setting up his own left-wing party – which is yet to be named – and already has 500,000 sign-ups expressing interest.

Zarah Sultana, a suspended Labour MP who quit the party to join Corbyn’s new group, told Novara Media that Starmer’s “spent years chasing Reform voters, echoing their rhetoric, even mimicking Enoch Powell. And for what? They still prefer Jeremy Corbyn.”

Corbyn himself told the outlet: “The Labour government is here to appease Reform. We are here to defeat Reform.”

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Starmer Finally Announces Plan To Formally Recognise Palestinian State In September Unless Israel Acts

Keir Starmer has finally outlined a plan for the UK to formally recognise a Palestinian state this autumn.

A government readout from the prime minister’s meeting with his cabinet said Starmer plans to “recognise the state of Palestine in September” before the UN’s General Assembly.

However, the Downing Street release clarified this would not happen if “the Israeli government takes substantive steps to end the appalling situation in Gaza, reaches a ceasefire, makes clear there will be no annexation in the West Bank, and commits to a long-term peace process that delivers a Two State Solution.”

The prime minister said neither party will get a veto over whether he decides to recognise Palestine as a state in September.

He also “reiterated that there is no equivalence between Israel and Hamas and that our demands on Hamas remain, that they must release all the hostages, sign up to a ceasefire, accept that they will play no role in the government of Gaza, and disarm.”

It means the UK will become the 148th country to either formally recognise Palestine – or announce its intentions to do so – unless Israel takes action on Gaza.

The decision was announced after the prime minister called his cabinet ministers back to Westminster in the middle of their summer recess to discuss the growing concerns about starvation in Gaza.

The worsening humanitarian crisis in the Palestinian territory already pushed Starmer’s ally, French president Emmanuel Macron, to announce his own plan to recognise the Palestinian state this autumn.

More than 250 MPs – including some in Labour – have also signed a letter calling on Starmer to follow Macron’s lead.

According to some reports, up to seven cabinet ministers are doing the same.

But the prime minister has, until now, resisted. Ministers have told the press it is a matter of “when, not if” the UK recognises Palestine as a state, but they have refused to offer a clear timeline.

However, Starmer did get Donald Trump’s stamp of approval on Monday to recognise Palestine on Monday.

The US president said: “I’m not going to take a position, I don’t mind him [Starmer] taking a position. I’m looking for getting people fed right now.”

In the readout, the prime minister told his colleagues now was the time to recognise Palestine.

He said: “The increasingly intolerable situation in Gaza and the diminishing prospect of a peace process towards a two state solution, now was the right time to move this position forward.”

Campaigners and charities around the world have repeatedly raised the alarm in recent weeks that mass starvation is taking place in Gaza right now.

There are hopes that by recognising Palestine, there will be more pressure on Israel to end its military offensive and let more aid into the territory.

However, it remains to be seen just how much of an impact this will have on Israel.

The country still has the support of its most powerful ally, the States, although Trump has raised concerns about mass starvation.

Israel has been attacking Gaza since October 7, 2023.

According to the local, Hamas-run health ministry, more than 60,000 Palestinians have been killed in the 22 months since the war began.

While tensions between Palestinians and Israelis were already high, they escalated after Hamas militants killed 1,200 people on Israeli soil and took a further 250 hostage.

Some of those captives have been released but 50 remain in Hamas’s hands.

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Trump Has Not Stopped Making News Since Getting To Scotland. Here’s 9 Things We’ve Learned So Far

Donald Trump is on day three of his four day visit to Scotland – and clearly in the mood to make some waves.

Although it would seem he’s primarily here for a golfing holiday at his two Scottish resorts in South Ayrshire and Aberdeenshire, Trump has also squeezed in several visits with international leaders.

He has already sat down with EU chief Ursula von der Leyen and UK prime minister Keir Starmer. A separate chat with Scotland’s first minister John Swinney is scheduled for this evening.

While Stop Trump Coalition protesters have been campaigned against his arrival outside the US consulate in Edinburgh, the president has been making major statements on both domestic and international politics from his Turnberry gold course.

Here’s everything that has happened through his visit so far:

1. He changed the 50-day deadline for Putin

Trump declared he was “disappointed” with Vladimir Putin’s ongoing aggression against Ukraine, especially after giving him 50 days to end the war – or face secondary sanctions.

So Trump said he was to cut that time down to 10 or 12 days, adding: “There’s no reason in waiting. I want to be generous but we just don’t see any progress being made.”

2. He disagreed with Israel over Gaza

Trump distanced himself from his ally Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s claim that there is “no starvation in Gaza”.

He said the situation in the Palestinian territory is “terrible” and that “we have to get the kids fed”.

He also suggested setting up food centre in Gaza with “no boundaries”.

Trump said Gaza is one of the main reasons for their meeting and that a ceasefire is very much possible.

3. Trump insisted he did not visit Epstein’s island

Trump claimed he “never went” to the island owned by the late convicted sex offender, Jeffrey Epstein, also known as Little Saint James, where many of the alleged offences took place.

The US president has been facing major backlash in the States, particularly with his MAGA base, recently.

It comes his administration announced it would not be releasing any further files on the former financier, who was friends with Trump for over a decade.

But Trump told reporters today: “I did turn it down but a lot of people in Palm Beach were invited to his island. In one of my very good moments, I turned it down. I didn’t want to go to his island.”

He also claimed: “For years I wouldn’t talk to Jeffery Epstein. I wouldn’t talk because he did something that was inappropriate.

“He hired help and I said don’t ever do that again. He’s stolen people that work for me, I said don’t ever do that again. He did it again and I threw him out of the place. I threw him out and that was it.”

4. He weighed in on the small boats crisis

When asked how the UK should deal with the migrants who arrive on British shores illegally, he spoke about the US immigration policy and said no one had come into the country illegally in the last month.

“If you’re stopping immigration and stopping the wrong people, my hats are off to you,” Trump said.

He added that he knows “nothing about the boats” but he welcomed Starmer’s strong opposition to it.

“Anyone here illegally should not be allowed in,” he said.

5. The president casually claimed he’s stopped six wars

The US president alleged to have stopped six wars since he was sworn into the Oval Office in January, adding: “I’m averaging around a war a month.”

He referred to India and Pakistan, and Congo and Rwanda. It’s not clear which other conflicts he is referring to, especially as the Ukraine war and the Israel-Gaza crisis are both ongoing.

6. Trump attacked Sadiq Khan

“I am not a fan of the London mayor [Sadiq Khan]. I think he has done a terrible job. He’s a nasty person,” Trump said.

Starmer tried to defuse the tension, cutting in: “He’s a friend of mine actually!”

But Trump continued: “No I think he’s done a terrible job.”

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‘I am not a fan of the London mayor. I think he has done a terrible job. He’s a nasty person.’

US President Donald Trump launches into attack on Sadiq Khan during his UK visit

Follow our live blog for more🔗https://t.co/jKjPXP82S4

📺 Sky 501, Virgin 602 and YouTube pic.twitter.com/JdlXtcrwSL

— Sky News (@SkyNews) July 28, 2025

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‘I am not a fan of the London mayor. I think he has done a terrible job. He’s a nasty person.’

US President Donald Trump launches into attack on Sadiq Khan during his UK visit

Follow our live blog for more🔗https://t.co/jKjPXP82S4

📺 Sky 501, Virgin 602 and YouTube pic.twitter.com/JdlXtcrwSL

— Sky News (@SkyNews) July 28, 2025

7. Trump said he liked Nigel Farage

Asked for his response on the UK’s “divided” world and Reform UK Nigel Farage, Trump said: “I like this man [Starmer] a lot and I like Nigel.

He said one is “slightly liberal” and the other “slightly conservative”, but they are both “good men”.

“Nigel is a friend of mine and Keir is a friend of mine,” he said.

Trump was clearly overlooking the major tensions between the two political figures who tend to disagree on almost all subjects.

8. Trump resumed his usual attacks on wind power

The US president tore into Scotland’s offshore wind turbines, calling the “ugly” – while also praising the UK government’s plans to build three nuclear reactors, calling nuclear power “safe”.

But he claimed the UK could get oil and gas out of the North Sea instead, which he claimed would be cheaper – and less ugly.

“Wind is the the most expensive form of energy and it destroys the beauty of your fields and your plains,” Trump claimed.

9. The US has struck a deal with EU

Oh and, before meeting Starmer, Trump also struck a major trade agreement.

On Sunday, Trump and EU chief Ursula von der Leyen announced a trade deal with 15% tariffs – half of what he initially threatened – on most goods going into the States from the trade bloc.

In exchange, the EU will have to invest in US energy products – which will prevent a potential trade war between the two allies.

The UK’s trade deal secured a 10% tariff in May, but many European allies suggested it was a bad agreement so are unlikely to be happy with this one.

There’s already been some backlash from France, Germany and Ireland over the deal.

Asked by reporters why the US gave a better deal to the UK than the EU, he said: “We have a very special relationship with this country.”

He said his mother was born there and that it “always has an impact” and says he “wants to see this part of the world to do well”.

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