Explainer
Why is UK
preparing to recognise Palestinian statehood?
Announcement
marks significant shift in UK’s position – but why has it happened now and what
effect will it have?
Eleni
Courea Political correspondent
Tue 29
Jul 2025 19.20 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2025/jul/29/uk-to-palestine-mean
Keir
Starmer is preparing to recognise Palestinian statehood as soon as September
unless Israel meets key conditions, including reaching a ceasefire and
committing to a long-term peace process.
The prime
minister’s announcement on Tuesday marked a significant shift in the UK’s
longstanding position that it would recognise Palestine as part of a peace
process at the point of maximum impact.
Downing
Street said Starmer would decide the extent to which Israel and Hamas had met
his conditions before he made a decision beforethe UN general assembly in
September.
This is
the first time the government has set concrete conditions and a timeline for
recognition of a Palestinian state.
What will
recognising Palestine mean?
Recognition
is a symbolic step but one that would infuriate the Israeli government, which
argues that it would encourage Hamas and reward terrorism.
It is in
effect a formal, political acknowledgment of Palestinian self-determination –
without the need to engage in thorny practicalities such as the location of its
borders or capital city.
It also
allows the establishment of full diplomatic relations that would result in a
Palestinian ambassador (rather than a head of mission) being stationed in
London and a British ambassador in Palestine. Advocates say it is a way of
kickstarting a political process towards an eventual two-state solution.
Out of
the 193 UN member states, about 140 already recognise Palestine as a state.
These include China, India and Russia, as well as a majority of European
countries such as Cyprus, Ireland, Norway, Spain and Sweden. But until
Thursday, when France announced it intended to recognise Palestine, no G7
country had committed to it.
Why now?
Two major
international factors and heavy domestic pressure have played a role in the
timing of Starmer’s announcement.
Emmanuel
Macron, the French president, set the ball rolling last week when he announced
that France would recognise Palestine at the UN general assembly in September.
Starmer has now set himself the same deadline, though unlike Macron he has set
conditions for Israel and Hamas.
The other
international factor was the tacit green light that Donald Trump gave to
Starmer on Monday. Asked whether the prime minister should bow to pressure from
MPs to recognise Palestine, the US president told reporters: “I’m not going to
take a position, I don’t mind him taking a position. I’m looking for getting
people fed right now.”
Trump’s
reaction to France’s announcement was similarly low-key – he said Macron’s
position on a Palestinian state “doesn’t matter” or “carry any weight”.
Starmer,
who has himself expressed horror at the images of starvation in Gaza, has also
come under heavy domestic pressure to act. Several of his most senior cabinet
ministers – including Angela Rayner and Yvette Cooper – support immediate
recognition.
Some
influential ministers, such as Wes Streeting and Shabana Mahmood, have raised
the issue in cabinet meetings. More than 250 cross-party MPs have signed a
letter calling for immediate recognition, including more than a third of Labour
MPs.
Polling
suggests that the public also backs action. In a poll commissioned by
Ecotricity, the company founded by Labour donor Dale Vince, and carried out by
Survation, 49% of people said the UK should recognise Palestine as a state
compared with 13% who said it should not.
What is
the detail of the plan?
An
official government statement issued on Tuesday night said the UK would
recognise Palestine at the UN general assembly unless Israel agrees to a
ceasefire, makes it clear it will not annex the West Bank, and “takes
substantive steps” to end the humanitarian crisis in Gaza including by allowing
the UN to supply aid. This effectively requires Israel to revive the prospect
of a two-state solution, an idea that Benjamin Netanyahu has long rejected.
The UK
government’s statement also reiterates its demands for Hamas to immediately
release all the hostages, sign up to an immediate ceasefire with Israel, commit
to disarmament and accept it will play no part in the government of Gaza.
Starmer
will assess the extent to which the two parties – Israel and Hamas – have met
his conditions in September.
The
government said that beyond recognition, it was working on a “credible peace
plan” with allies to establish transitional governance and security
arrangements in Gaza and ensure the delivery of UN aid. It said this plan must
involve the withdrawal of Israeli forces and the removal of Hamas leadership
from Gaza as steps towards a negotiated two-state solution.
Who else
might join in?
The
government’s statement paves the way for the UK and France to jointly recognise
Palestine in September.
Several
other countries are taking part in UN talks on this subject brokered by France
and Saudi Arabia in New York. France expects several Arab countries to condemn
Hamas and call for its disarmament for the first time in an effort to encourage
more European countries to join in recognising Palestine.
European
countries that do not already recognise Palestine could reassess their
positions in the coming weeks – the Belgian government has said it will
determine its policy in September.
Some
countries, including Germany and the US, say they will recognise a Palestinian
state only as part of a long-term political solution to the conflict in the
Middle East.
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