Munich Security Conference live: Europe must be ready to fight Russia as ‘warning signs are there’, says Starmer

Munich Security Conference live: Europe must be ready to fight Russia as ‘warning signs are there’, says Starmer


Starmer hits pro-European tones in urgent speech on unity in uncertain times – snap analysis

Munich Security Conference live: Europe must be ready to fight Russia as ‘warning signs are there’, says Starmer

Jakub Krupa

in Munich

This was a very pro-European speech by Starmer, at times even resembling Macron’s speech from yesterday – and similarly undercut by serious doubts as to the credibility of the vision he outlined given his precarious future.

Britain’s prime minister Keir Starmer gives a speech at the 62nd Munich Security Conference (MSC) in Munich, Germany.
Britain’s prime minister Keir Starmer gives a speech at the 62nd Munich Security Conference (MSC) in Munich, Germany. Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/AFP/Getty Images

His repeated references to “10 years on from Brexit” and “some urgency” in this reset (10:33, 10:56) were particularly interesting: could it be a sign of further rapprochement as we get closer to the actual 10th anniversary of the Brexit referendum in June?

Speaking alongside the European Commission’s president, a sign in itself, Starmer has made it pretty clear that his government is very interested in closer defence amid increasingly urgent threat from Russia (10:31, 10:42) and reinvigorating trade ties (10:46), including some sort of alignment with, but not a membership of, the EU single market. And there is some appetite for both of these things on the EU side, too.

But reopening these debates would bring back the usual questions about associated trade offs and political costs, which both are tricky for any UK government, even at the best of times. Just thinking about it give me flashbacks from covering the Brexit years.

There is also a domestic angle to all of that.

As my colleague Jessica Elgot noted last month, the battle over closer ties with Europe is not accidental here as it is likely to be a key dividing line that Labour seeks to draw with Reform.

We heard a bit of that in his comments warning against “the peddlers of easy answers” on “the extremes of left and right” (10:49).

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Key events

Starmer gets asked about domestic politics in Britain now, and if he “narrowly just missed being toppled” in the last few weeks and how much credibility he has to talk about these long-term projects being in a difficult spot politically.

He says he rejects that, as he “ended the week much stronger than I started it.”

“My party and my government is completely united on the question of Ukraine and defence and security and the need for stronger relations with Europe, on defence, on security and on economy as well,” he says.

He says some of these issues have support across the parliament, except for Reform party politicians, which he says are “pro-Putin.”

“Imagine, if they were in government in the United Kingdom, the Coalition of the Willing could not exist with the UK’s participation in it; we would not be seen as a leader on the European or international stage,” he says.

He warns that under Reform, “we would be seen as a country that people couldn’t do business with.”

He says Labour supported the Conservative government’s line on Ukraine when it was in opposition, and he’s happy to see this continue after the change of government in 2024.

And that concludes the Q&A.

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