Prime Minister Keir Starmer has urged patience in what he promises will be a “decade of renewal” for the UK. The recent swings in City of London financial markets show that time is a luxury he doesn’t have.
Keir Starmer’s office insisted the prime minister was still committed to ending revolving-door relationships between government and business after appointing a former financial industry lobbyist to oversee the very firms she represented as recently as last year.
Keir Starmer and Kemi Badenoch face Commons clash in wake of Tulip Siddiq's resignation - PM faces questions over Tulip Siddiq’s resignation as Treasury minister
Pro-Palestinian activists have slammed Sir Keir Starmer’s Gaza ceasefire statement as a “disgusting refusal to acknowledge Israeli war crimes”, vowing to continue to march through London. Yesterday, Israel and Hamas announced that they have reached a ceasefire deal designed to end the 15-month-long war.
Tory tactical voting last year – but, John Rentoul argues, new polling suggests that the next election could be very different
As Winston Churchill, the Chancellor of the 1920s, memorably once put it: “For a nation to try to tax itself into prosperity is like a man standing in a bucket and trying to lift himself up.” The third option, that of major cuts in spending, is the least palatable to socialists but by far the most realistic.
Keir Starmer, whose new government is under pressure on the economic front has broken cover on the U.K.’s AI strategy.
Without naming Mr. Musk directly, Prime Minister Keir Starmer denounced the billionaire’s spreading of falsehoods about a child sex abuse scandal.
LONDON — British Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Monday condemned “lies and misinformation” that he said are undermining U.K. democracy, in response to a barrage of attacks on his government from Elon Musk. The billionaire Tesla CEO has taken an ...
Sir Keir Starmer faced fresh calls from the Tories on Saturday to sack Ms Siddiq as a minister, as Bangladesh’s leader Muhammad Yunus called for an investigation into the properties to determine whether they were acquired through “plain robbery”.
A thinktank backed by 16 peers has criticised the government's plan to lift a ban on compensation for unlawful detention during the Troubles.