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    You are at:Home»Politics»UK says it ‘will never compromise on national security’ after Trump calls Chagos deal ‘act of great stupidity’ – UK politics live | Politics
    Politics

    UK says it ‘will never compromise on national security’ after Trump calls Chagos deal ‘act of great stupidity’ – UK politics live | Politics

    onlyplanz_80y6mtBy onlyplanz_80y6mtJanuary 20, 20260021 Mins Read
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    UK says it ‘will never compromise on national security’ after Trump calls Chagos deal ‘act of great stupidity’ – UK politics live | Politics
    The Chagos Islands Photograph: Pictures from History/Universal Images Group/Getty Images
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    Key events

    • 15m ago

      Gordon Brown urges global democracies to defy Trump with declaration of support for self-determination and rule of law

    • 16m ago

      Tories suspend shadow minister in Senedd for talking to Reform UK about potential defection

    • 1h ago

      Government approves plan for Chinese “super-embassy” in London

    • 1h ago

      Reaction of global financial markets to Greenland crisis so far ‘more muted’ than feared, Bank of England boss tells MPs

    • 1h ago

      Trump’s comments about Starmer show ‘appeasing a bully never works’, Ed Davey says

    • 1h ago

      Darren Jones suggests UK unlikely to join Trump’s ‘board of peace’ for Gaza if Putin on it too

    • 2h ago

      Trump talking ‘silly nonsense’ about Chagos Islands deal, Lib Dems say

    • 2h ago

      Chagos Islands deal now a done deal, chief secretary to PM, Darren Jones, says

    • 2h ago

      US speaker Mike Johnson says UK-US ‘special relationship’ will endure, in speech to MPs

    • 3h ago

      Badenoch says Trump right to say Chagos Islands sovereignty handover ‘terrible policy’

    • 3h ago

      US, all other Five Eyes allies, and key international partners, all backed Chagos Islands deal, UK government says

    • 3h ago

      Minister plays down Trump condemning ‘stupidity’ of Chagos deal, claiming PM’s relationship with president ‘is working’

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    Here is the written statement from Steve Reed, the housing secretary, confirming that he has approved the application for the Chinese “super-embassy” in London.

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    Gordon Brown urges global democracies to defy Trump with declaration of support for self-determination and rule of law

    Other Labour figures from the Blair era, like Peter Mandelson (here) and Jack Straw (here), have congratulated Keir Starmer on the way he is handling Donald Trump. But, in a powerful article for the Guardian, the former PM Gordon Brown has taken a different approach.

    In his article Brown does not say anything directly critical about Keir Starmer, and he praises him for leading a “European-wide chorus of resistance” to Trump’s plan to buy Greenland, and for his support for the international legal order.

    But, implicitly, Brown is saying Starmer, and other European leaders, should be going much further. Starmer and his ministers argue that the UK’s reasonable, non-confrontational approach to Trump is working, and that the UK-US alliance is still functioning in the national interest.

    Brown disagrees. He argues that trying to reign in the Trump administration has failed.

    In quick succession, the US has abandoned its longstanding championing of the rule of law, human rights, democracy and the territorial integrity of nation states. Gone is its erstwhile support for humanitarian aid and environmental stewardship. Gone, too, is the founding principle of the postwar settlement: that countries choose diplomacy and multilateral cooperation over aggression and unilateral action. We cannot doubt any longer that the president meant it when he said he doesn’t “need international law”, and that the only constraint on his exercise of power would be “my own morality, my own mind”.

    Indeed, in the past few weeks, every single promise of the US-led Atlantic charter, authored by Franklin D Roosevelt and Winston Churchill, which foreshadowed the United Nations charter and which includes “freedom of the high seas”, free trade and freedom from colonial aggrandisement, has seemingly been cast aside. For Trump, as his political adviser Stephen Miller tells us, the world is to be “governed by strength … by force … [and] by power”.

    And Brown says now is the moment “for Europe and the democracies of the global south to lift their heads out of the sand”. He is proposing some sort of new alliance of democracies.

    So how to proceed? The democracies of the world should draft a short values statement, echoing the UN charter’s starting point – “We the peoples …” – and this time showing we mean it. Its first section would assert our full support for self-determination and the mutual recognition of nation states; for the outlawing of war and coercion; and for the primacy of law, civil rights and democratic accountability as the essential means by which human dignity is advanced. A second section would outline the rules that govern the cooperation essential to guarantee food, water and security, economic opportunity and social justice, and climate resilience and health for all, including pandemic prevention.

    Such a charter should make it clear that no one need apply for the vacant leadership of the global order for, in our new multipolar world, power has to be shared among countries, each with vastly different traditions, ethnicities and ideologies. But neither can the new world acquiesce in what the US, Russia and China now threaten: a return to the 19th-century arena of spheres of influence and great-power domination.

    Quite how this would work, or how it would dovetail with the United Nations, is not clear. And Brown does not rule out the US being part of this. But he clearly implies that it can’t happen while Trump remains president.

    Share

    Tories suspend shadow minister in Senedd for talking to Reform UK about potential defection

    A Welsh Conservative politician has been sacked over suspicions he was plotting to defect to Reform UK, PA Media reports. PA says:

    James Evans, the member of the Senedd (Welsh parliament) for Brecon and Radnorshire, has been removed from the shadow cabinet and had the Conservative whip withdrawn.

    In a statement on social media, Welsh Conservative leader Darren Millar said Evans was “continuing to engage” with Reform representatives about the possibility of defecting.

    Evans was the shadow cabinet secretary for health and social care in the Senedd.

    Millar said in his statement: “This morning, I took the decision to remove James Evans from the Welsh Conservative shadow cabinet and withdraw the Conservative whip.

    “I did so after being informed by James that he was continuing to engage with Reform representatives about the possibility of defecting to the party, in spite of his personal assurances on Friday that he had rejected an approach they initiated last week.

    “Understandably, I expect all Welsh Conservative MSs and candidates to be 100% committed to our party and our plan to fix Wales.

    “Regrettably, James was unable to give me that commitment.”

    Yesterday Kemi Badenoch wrote to Tory MPs at Westminster suggesting that, if they were minded to defect, they should go now. Anyone undermining the party would dealt with “firmly”, she said.

    Share

    Government approves plan for Chinese “super-embassy” in London

    The government has approved plans for China’s new embassy in London despite criticism from MPs and campaigners over its security implications, PA Media reports.

    Pippa Crerar says:

    BREAKING: The construction of vast new Chinese embassy complex in east London has been approved, despite concerns about security and impact on political exiles in capital.

    The decision brings to an end – for now at least – saga that has been running since 2018 over site at Royal Mint Court near Tower Bridge.

    But residents of Royal Mint Court plan to mount legal challenge to decision within weeks, amid concerns they could be forced out of homes, potentially delaying project by months or years.

    Share

    Updated at 06.06 EST

    Reaction of global financial markets to Greenland crisis so far ‘more muted’ than feared, Bank of England boss tells MPs

    Andrew Bailey, the governor of the Bank of England, has said that the reaction of the global financial markets to the Greenland crisis has so far been “more muted” than he feared. But the Bank is still “very alert” to the risks it poses.

    Giving evidence to the Commons Treasury committee this morning, Bailey said:

    The level of geopolitical uncertainty and geopolitical issues is a big consideration, because they can have financial stability consequences.

    Let me put that in a bit of context in two respects. One, having said that, growth in the world economy was a lot more stable than we thought it would be.

    The second point is about financial markets and is a fairly similar point, that we worry considerably about how markets react to those things.

    Market reactions have actually been more muted than we would have feared and expected.

    Overriding those points, I take neither of those as a point of assurance. We have to be very alert to these things.

    Share

    Trump’s comments about Starmer show ‘appeasing a bully never works’, Ed Davey says

    Ed Davey, the Lib Dem leader, says that Donald Trump’s comments about the Chagos Islands deal show that Keir Starmer’s approach to handling the US president has failed.

    This shows Starmer’s approach to Trump has failed. The Chagos Deal was sold as proof the government could work with him, now it’s falling apart.

    It’s time for the government to stand up to Trump; appeasing a bully never works.

    Share

    Darren Jones suggests UK unlikely to join Trump’s ‘board of peace’ for Gaza if Putin on it too

    In his Today programme interview Darren Jones, the chief secretary to the PM, was also asked about Donald Trump’s decision to Vladimir Putin to join his proposed “board of peace” for Gaza

    Jones said:

    The idea that President Putin is a man of peace is clearly not true, and for the birds.

    Asked if the UK would join, Jones said the UK had received an invitation to join and was talking to US officials about how it might operate.

    Asked if the UK would join a “board of peace” including Putin, Jones said:

    I agreed that President Putin is not a man of peace and it would be absurd for him to be on the “board of peace”.

    Asked if that meant it would be absurd for the UK or Keir Starmer to be on it if Putin were there too, Jones did not firmly rule this out. But he did say this was why British officials were looking into the idea carefully – hinting strongly that the UK would not join up in those circumstances.

    Share

    Updated at 05.32 EST

    According to Jim Sciutto from CNN, Donald Trump told Keir Starmer that he had received “bad information” about the small troop deployment by some Nato countries to Greenland that took place before he announced sanctions on the Nato countries involved because they are opposed to his plan to buy Greenland.

    New: President Trump conceded in a weekend phone call with British PM Keir Starmer that he may have gotten “bad information” on the announcement of troop deployments from European countries to Greenland, according to a senior UK official. UK officials see this concession as a potential path to de-escalation.

    The Greenland reconnaissance mission was about protecting Greenland from Russia. But Trump seems to have, wrongly, concluded that it was about protecting Greenland from the US.

    At his press conference yesterday, Starmer did not dispute the claim that Trump had been misinformed, but he did not say that explicitly either.

    In his interview on the Today programme, asked about the CNN report, Darren Jones, the chief secretary to the PM, also insisted that the troop deployment was about looking at options to defend Greenland from Russia and China. The UK just sent one officer.

    But Jones would not comment on what Trump did or did not think was happening.

    Share

    Trump talking ‘silly nonsense’ about Chagos Islands deal, Lib Dems say

    The Liberal Democrats have described Donald Trump’s latest comments about the Chagos Islands deal as “silly nonsense”. Asked about them in an interview on Sky News, Tim Farron, a former Lib Dem leader, said:

    We have real concerns about the [Chagos Islands] proposals, and we’ve been challenged them in both the Commons and the Lords.

    But Donald Trump was in favour of all that.

    This is just all silly nonsense from him, because he’s feeling aggrieved that people are not rolling over when it comes to Greenland.

    Farron also said he wanted Keir Starmer to be more robust in his handling of Trump.

    The problem I have with Keir Starmer is that he’s still being too weak when it comes to Donald Trump.

    Our friends across the Channel are being much stronger. They’re saying they would reciprocate with tariffs.

    We know the way to deal with bullies is not to appease them. It’s to stand up to them. Otherwise, you end up being their victims.

    Share

    Jack Straw, a former Labour foreign secretary, has praised Keir Starmer for the way he is handling Donald Trump. While some opposition parties want Starmer to be more confrontational, Straw told Times Radio that would be a mistake. He said:

    The best approach [to handling Trump] that I know of is the one that’s being adopted by our prime minister, Keir Starmer. It’s very hard. It’s very frustrating. I’m sure there have been occasions where Sir Keir has said things to himself in the shaving mirror about Mr Trump that he would not wish to be repeated. But he is an example of how to handle Donald Trump. It is infinitely better than challenging Trump’s ego, to which there is no limit, trying to work around him.

    And up to now, the Starmer approach to Trump has succeeded, not least in the fact that, until this latest outburst on Greenland, we did have a much better deal on tariffs than, say, the European Union has had.

    Share

    Chagos Islands deal now a done deal, chief secretary to PM, Darren Jones, says

    Darren Jones, the chief secretary to the PM and Cabinet Office minister, has said that it is too late to undo the Chagos Islands deal.

    In a tweet this morning Nigel Farage, the Reform UK leader, claimed that Donald Trump is now vetoing it. (See 9.28am.)

    In an interview with Times Radio, Jones said it was a done deal. He explained:

    The treaty has been signed with the Mauritian government. So I can’t reverse the clock on that. The treaty has been signed. Parliament has a kind of enabling function on treaties. It’s not like a traditional piece of legislation. So it can’t unwind the treaty having been signed.

    Share

    US speaker Mike Johnson says UK-US ‘special relationship’ will endure, in speech to MPs

    Johnson says he met Keir Starmer yesterday, after Starmer’s speech and press conference about Greenland and the Trump tariffs threat. Johnson says:

    When I met with prime minister Starmer at Downing Street yesterday, I told him that I thought his national address a few hours earlier was well done.

    He noted, of course, that the UK and the US are close allies and that our strong, constructive partnership all these years has been built on mutual respect and focussed on results. I thought that was exactly the right message and the right tone, and because of that we’ve always been able to work through our differences calmly, as friends. We will continue to do that.

    Johnson, a Republican, also says he spoke to Donald Trump at length yesterday.

    I told the president that I felt that my mission here today was to encourage our friends and help to calm the waters, so to speak, and I hope to do so.

    As the prime minister said yesterday, let us look to agreement, continue our dialogue and find a resolution, just as we always have in the past.

    And, in that process, I am confident that we can and will maintain and strengthen our special relationship between these two nations, send a message of unity and resolve to our allies around the world, and remind our adversaries and the terrorists and tyrants everywhere that our nations, that are dedicated to freedom and justice … are stronger and more resolved now than ever before.

    Johnson, who is on a visit to mark the 250th anniversary of the US declaration of independence, is now talking about freedom, and the values that inspired the founding fathers.

    Mike Johnson speaking to MPs in parliament Photograph: Mike Johnson/GuardianShare

    Mike Johnson has now started his speech. He was introduced by Lindsay Hoyle, the Commons speaker. Johnson said it was always hard following Hoyle because when Hoyle gives a speech “it goes on and on and on”.

    MPs will know what he means …

    Share

    Mike Johnson, the US speaker, is about to give his speech to MPs and peers in the Houses of Parliament. The most prominent overseas speakers (heads of state or government) are invited to speak in Westminster Hall, or the Royal Gallery in the Lords, but Johnson (third in line of succession in the US) is having to make do with a committee room.

    There is a live feed here.

    US house speaker Mike Johnson addressed UK parliament – watch liveShare

    Nigel Farage, the Reform UK leader, repeatedly claimed towards the end of 2024, after the UK government first announced its deal to transfer sovereignty of the Chagos Islands, that what was then the incoming Trump administration would not accept it. He ended up looking a bit daft when, at a meeting with Keir Starmer in February 2025, President Trump said he thought the deal was “going to work out very well” and when the US confirmed it was happy with the deal a few weeks later. American approval was crucial at that point because the US is the main user of the Diego Garcia airbase it jointly runs with the UK.

    In response to Trump’s U-turn on the Chagos Islands, Farage said this morning:

    Thank goodness Trump has vetoed the surrender of the Chagos islands.

    Farage may be reading too much into what Trump said. Trump does not have the power to veto the deal very easily now that Mauritius and the UK have finalised terms and, as Jessica Elgot reports in her story, he seems to be criticising the deal not because he wants to overturn it, but because he can use it to try to justify his proposed takeover of Greenland.

    Share

    Badenoch says Trump right to say Chagos Islands sovereignty handover ‘terrible policy’

    The Conservative party has consistently opposed the Chagos Islands deal (even though the negotiations with Mauritius that led to the treaty agreed by Labour first started when the Tories were in office) and Kemi Badenoch has warmly welcomed Donald Trump’s comments. She posted this on social media.

    Paying to surrender the Chagos Islands is not just an act of stupidity, but of complete self sabotage.

    I’ve been clear and unfortunately on this issue President Trump is right. Keir Starmer’s plan to give away the Chagos Islands is a terrible policy that weakens UK security and hands away our sovereign territory. And to top it off, makes us and our NATO allies weaker in face of our enemies.

    Last night I met Speaker Johnson and we are united in that view. Britain’s and America’s interests align. Keir Starmer has the chance to change course on Chagos. Conservatives call on President Trump to reconsider Greenland too.

    She also posted a picture of her meeting with Mike Johnson, the US speaker.

    Kemi Badenoch with Mike Johnson Photograph: Kemi BadenochShare

    Patrick Wintour, the Guardian’s diplomatic editor, says the Trump tweet about the Chagos Islands deal is “a disaster for Starmer and designed to humiliate him the day after Starmer defended the value of the special relationship”.

    Share

    US, all other Five Eyes allies, and key international partners, all backed Chagos Islands deal, UK government says

    The government has issued a statement defending the Chagos Islands deal in the light of the condemnation of it from Donald Trump. (See 8.52am.) A government spokesperson said:

    The UK will never compromise on our national security. We acted because the base on Diego Garcia was under threat after court decisions undermined our position and would have prevented it operating as intended in future.

    This deal secures the operations of the joint US-UK base on Diego Garcia for generations, with robust provisions for keeping its unique capabilities intact and our adversaries out.

    It has been publicly welcomed by the US, Australia and all other Five Eyes allies, as well as key international partners including India, Japan and South Korea.

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    Minister plays down Trump condemning ‘stupidity’ of Chagos deal, claiming PM’s relationship with president ‘is working’

    Good morning. Yesterday, at his press conference in Downing Street, Keir Starmer said he wanted to restrict the amount of time that toddlers spend with their screens. He probably was not thinking of Donald Trump, but Trump’s egotism, greed and lack of self control mean that he is regularly compared to a young child and, within the last couple of hours, on a flight from the US to Davos, he has been glued to his screen, firing off inflammatory posts on his Truth Social network.

    For Starmer, the most embarrassing is one criticising the UK’s decision to transfer sovereignty of the Chagos Islands to Mauritius (in return for an agreement that the UK and the US will still be able to use the Diego Garcia military base for at least another 99 years). The Trump administation approved the deal when it was negotiated, accepting the Downing Street argument that this would remove the risk of the UK and the US losing access to Diego Garcia under interntational law. Trump now says this is a sign of “total weakness” and “great stupidity”.

    Trump tweet Photograph: Truth Social

    Trump has also been trolling Starmer and other Europeans with renewed calls for the US to annex Greenland.

    Trump tweet Photograph: Truth SocialTrump tweet Photograph: Trump tweet/Truth Social

    Here is Jessica Elgot’s story about this.

    And there is more coverage of the breakdown of US-Europe relations on our Europe live blog.

    Darren Jones, the Cabinet Office minister and chief secretary to the PM, has been giving interviews this morning. Asked about Trump’s Chagos Islands tweet, he played down the significance of it, and insisted that British diplomacy with the US was still “working”.

    In an interview with BBC Breakfast, he defended the Chagos Islands deal. He said:

    This is the right way to secure the future of the island and I wouldn’t for a second suggest that Britain should be embarrassed or humiliated by any of those decisions.

    And, in an interview on the Today programme, asked if Starmer was feeling calm about Trump accusing him of an act of “great stupidity”, Jones replied:

    Yes, he is, because the prime minister’s primary duty is to protect British interests. And, as he’s shown repeatedly, he does a pretty good job at doing that, including with President Trump.

    Asked if Starmer would just ignore what Trump was saying about issues like Greenland, Jones said the UK disagreed with Trump about Greenland. Asked if Starmer would behave differently in his dealings with Trump in future, Jones replied:

    As I say, in the past the prime minister has shown that private, proper British diplomacy can work. We’ve been able to secure deals that protected medicine production in the UK, car manufacturing, we’ve got a trade deal across the line. This put us in the best position of any other country in the world.

    And we’ve made progress on military aspects, including in Ukraine.

    So the prime minister,has a good track record of this. It’s noisy, I understand that. It’s challenging. It is not normal for geopolitical discussions to be handled in this way. But British diplomacy is working, the prime minister’s relationship is working, and we will continue to do that.

    I will post more from the Jones interviews soon.

    Here is the agenda for the day.

    Morning: Keir Starmer chairs cabinet.

    9.30am: Mike Johnson, speaker of the US House of Representatives, gives a speech to MPs and peers in parliament.

    10.50am: Andy Burnham, the Greater Manchester mayor, gives a speech to the Institute for Fiscal Studies.

    11am: Darren Jones, the Cabinet Office minister and chief secretary to the PM, gives a speech the Institute for Government.

    Morning: Kemi Badenoch is on a visit in south-west London.

    11.30am: Yvette Cooper, the foreign secretary, takes questions in the Commons.

    Noon: Downing Street holds a lobby briefing.

    After 12.30pm: Dan Jarvis, the security minister, is expected to make a statement to MPs about the proposed Chinese “super-embassy” in London, which is expected to be approved this morning.

    Afternoon: Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, takes speaks at two events at Davos.

    Late afternoon: MPs debate Lords amendment to the bill Diego Garcia military base and British Indian Ocean Territory bill, which gives sovereignty of the Chagos Islands to Mauritius.

    If you want to contact me, please post a message below the line when comments are open (between 10am and 3pm), or message me on social media. I can’t read all the messages BTL, but if you put “Andrew” in a message aimed at me, I am more likely to see it because I search for posts containing that word.

    If you want to flag something up urgently, it is best to use social media. You can reach me on Bluesky at @andrewsparrowgdn.bsky.social. The Guardian has given up posting from its official accounts on X, but individual Guardian journalists are there, I still have my account, and if you message me there at @AndrewSparrow, I will see it and respond if necessary.

    I find it very helpful when readers point out mistakes, even minor typos. No error is too small to correct. And I find your questions very interesting too. I can’t promise to reply to them all, but I will try to reply to as many as I can, either BTL or sometimes in the blog.

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    Updated at 04.05 EST

    act Calls Chagos compromise deal great live national politics security stupidity Trump
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