Starmer wants to ‘tur­bocharge’ UK’s indus­try to respond to Trump tar­iffs

Starmer wants to ‘turbocharge’ UK’s industry to respond to Trump tariffs

Unit­ed King­dom Prime Min­is­ter Keir Starmer said his gov­ern­ment is look­ing at increas­ing the country’s indus­try to off­set the impact of the tar­iffs that the Trump admin­is­tra­tion imposed. 

The coun­try was hop­ing it would be spared from Pres­i­dent Don­ald Trump’s “rec­i­p­ro­cal tar­iffs,” but they were hit with a 10% tar­iff across the board. Starmer not­ed that all options are being con­sid­ered in how Britain responds.

“We are ready for what comes next. The new world is less gov­erned by estab­lished rules and more by deals and alliances. It demands the best of British virtues – cool heads, prag­ma­tism and a clear under­stand­ing of our nation­al inter­est,” Starmer wrote in an op-ed pub­lished in the Tele­graph Sat­ur­day.

“We stand ready to use indus­tri­al pol­i­cy to help shel­ter British busi­ness from the storm,” Starmer said.

He not­ed that “Some peo­ple may feel uncom­fort­able about … the idea the state should inter­vene direct­ly. But we sim­ply can­not cling on to old sen­ti­ments when the world is turn­ing this fast,” he said.

Starmer said his gov­ern­ment will “tur­bocharge” plans to improve the country’s indus­tri­al com­pet­i­tive­ness this week.

“That refusal to accept a chang­ing world is at the heart of Britain’s declin­ism over recent decades,” Starmer added. “For too long, our major insti­tu­tions have sim­ply tried to man­age crises. The approach has been to mud­dle through, rather than deal with the fun­da­men­tal cause.”

Trump has framed his newest tar­iffs as “rec­i­p­ro­cal” to match trade bar­ri­ers that oth­er coun­tries impose on prod­ucts from the U.S., dol­lar for dol­lar, but in real­i­ty, they are based on trade deficits. 

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Starmer main­tained that “all options remain on the table” but that he would “only strike a deal if it is right for British busi­ness and the secu­ri­ty of work­ing peo­ple.”

“That also means strength­en­ing our alliances and reduc­ing bar­ri­ers to trade with oth­er economies around the world. Agile diplo­ma­cy deliv­ers a stronger, more diverse, and secure econ­o­my here at home,” he wrote.