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Starmer, Trump hail renewal of 'special relationship'

2025-09-19 HKT 07:00
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  • Donald Trump and Keir Starmer both hailed the special relationship between the US and the UK, before the US president left the UK after less than 48 hours on British soil. Photo: Reuters
    Donald Trump and Keir Starmer both hailed the special relationship between the US and the UK, before the US president left the UK after less than 48 hours on British soil. Photo: Reuters
Peter Anderson speaks to Janice Lo on Hong Kong Today
Donald Trump and British Prime Minister Keir Starmer hailed the renewal of their nations' "special relationship" on Thursday, as the US leader's unprecedented second state visit drew to a close with a show of unity.

At a press conference when the two leaders glossed over differences on Gaza and wind power to present a united front, Trump said Russian President Vladimir Putin had "let him down" and he was disappointed other countries were still buying Russian oil because only a low oil price would punish Moscow.

After two days of his state visit to Britain, which the US leader described as an "exquisite honour", Trump was in a relaxed mode at the final press conference while Starmer was focused on avoiding areas of disagreement.

Neither leader was tripped up by potentially embarrassing subjects, with both batting away questions over the late sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and his ties to Trump and to Starmer's former ambassador to the US.

"We've renewed the special relationship for a new era," Starmer told reporters.

"This partnership today is a signal of our determination to win this race together and to ensure it brings real benefits in jobs, in growth, in lower bills, to put more hard-earned cash in people's pockets at the end of each month."

Trump also paid homage to the close ties enjoyed by the two countries, saying Starmer was a tough negotiator in securing the first tariff deal with the US, although Britain has still not got the lower US tariffs on steel that it was seeking.

"We're forever joined, and we are forever friends and we will always be friends," Trump said.

Earlier, at the start of a business reception, some of the leading names in US and UK business were welcomed by the two leaders to unveil a record 150 billion pound package of US investment into Britain, part of a wider 250 billion pound package officials say will benefit both sides.

Starmer said the deals would "light up the special relationship for years to come". Trump was equally effusive. "The ties between our countries are priceless.

"We've done some things that financially are great for both countries ... I think it's an unbreakable bond we have, regardless of what we're doing today. I think it's unbreakable."

RTHK's UK correspondent, Peter Anderson, said there was relief for British advisers who had jitters ahead of the joint press conference.

"We have seen times recently where President Trump has almost been perceived to have hijacked bilateral meetings and press conferences... There is a sense from this press conference that Donald Trump is genuinely warm towards the UK," he told Hong Kong Today.

"There were a number of issues that were discussed that could have been potentially problematic," Anderson added, citing the UK's imminent recognition of a Palestinian statehood and Russia as examples.

"All matters that could have come up and could have sullied the tone of the press conference, but largely I think people are perceiving and concluding that it went well, it showed a harmony between the two leaders."


Starmer has pitched Britain as a destination for US investment, aligned to its financial services, tech and energy sectors so it can draw in US capital and build out its infrastructure to grow the economy.

He was keen to champion deals including a new technology pact with companies from Microsoft to Nvidia and OpenAI pledging 31 billion pounds and 100 billion pounds from Blackstone.

In terms of any differences, it was on foreign affairs where the two were most out of lockstep.

Starmer, and other European leaders, have been pressing Trump to put more pressure on Putin to end his war against Ukraine; Trump, while criticising the Russian president, did not mention any further sanctions against Moscow.

The US leader again expressed frustration that European nations were still buying Russian oil, but said Starmer was not part of their number.

Trump also repeated his position that he disagreed with countries recognising Palestine – something Starmer has said Britain will do if Israel fails to relieve suffering in Gaza and reach a ceasefire in its nearly two-year war with Hamas.

"I have a disagreement with the Prime Minister on that score, one of our few disagreements, actually," Trump said.

But the two leaders sidestepped questions on Epstein, after both were asked about Starmer's decisions to sack Peter Mandelson as ambassador to the US last week after his close ties with the late financier were released.

Trump's relationship with Epstein has also come under scrutiny.

"I don't know him actually," Trump said in response to a question about Mandelson. "I think the prime minister would be better speaking over that, it was a choice that he made."

Starmer repeated his position: "Some information came to light last week which wasn't available when he was appointed and I made a decision about it, and that's very clear." (Reuters/RTHK)

Starmer, Trump hail renewal of 'special relationship'