US
president warns Keir Starmer over closer ties with China during British PM’s
trip to secure lower tariffs and better access to Chinese market
Pippa
Crerar Political editor
Fri 30
Jan 2026 05.32 CET
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/jan/30/trump-dangerous-uk-china-starmer-xi-jinping-beijing
Donald
Trump has warned the UK against doing business with China, just hours after
Keir Starmer lauded the economic relationship during a landmark visit to
Beijing.
The US
president said it was “very dangerous” for the UK to pursue closer ties with
the rival superpower as the prime minister’s three-hour talks with leader Xi
Jinping underlined a thaw in previously strained relations.
Starmer,
the first British prime minister to travel to Beijing in eight years, promised
a “more sophisticated” relationship with China, as he secured improved market
access, lower tariffs and investment deals.
But in
Washington, replying to questions about Starmer’s attempts at an economic
reset, Trump said: “Well, it’s very dangerous for them to do that.”
His
remarks could create nerves inside Downing Street given the US president’s
unpredictability and long-held hostility towards China. One official said the
US had been aware of the trip and the UK’s objectives in advance.
Asked by
BBC Breakfast if the US president was wrong in his remarks, the trade minister
Chris Bryant said: “Yes, he is wrong, and I say this precisely because, apart
from anything else, he himself said in his own statement that he is a friend
with President Xi, and as I understand it, President Trump is going to China
himself in April.”
After his
talks with Xi at the Great Hall of the People on Thursday, Starmer said the
UK’s relationship with China was in a “good, strong place”, and that his
meetings had provided “just the level of engagement that we hoped for”.
“We
warmly engaged and made some real progress, actually, because the UK has got a
huge amount to offer,” he told a meeting of the UK-China Business Forum at the
Bank of China in Beijing.
The chair
of the British Chamber of Commerce in China, Chris Torrens, said Starmer’s
visit to Beijing was “successful”, telling the BBC: “It makes sense for UK to
be looking to China, it’s one of its larger trading partners.”
The UK
prime minister was later due to travel to Shanghai before leaving for Tokyo to
meet his Japanese counterpart Sanae Takaichi for a working dinner.
He is
just the latest western leader to have visited Beijing in recent weeks looking
to build ties with the world’s second largest economy, and to hedge against an
unpredictable US president.
It comes
amid Trump’s on-off threats of trade tariffs and pledges to grab control of
Greenland, an autonomous territory of Denmark, which have rattled longstanding
US allies including the UK.
Earlier
this week, Trump threatened to impose tariffs on Canada if it went through with
economic deals struck with China on a recent visit to Beijing by its prime
minister, Mark Carney.
After
commenting on the UK’s engagement with Beijing, Trump said it was “even more
dangerous, I think, for Canada. Canada is not doing well. They’re doing very
poorly, and you can’t look at China as the answer.”
However,
the US president, whose country is China’s biggest single trading partner,
added: “President Xi is a friend of mine, I know him very well.”
Before
his trip to Beijing, Starmer said in an interview with Bloomberg that Britain
would not have to choose between the US and China, saying the country could
strengthen economic ties with Beijing without angering Trump or harming
relations with Washington.
“We’ve
got very close relations with the US – of course, we want to – and we will
maintain that business, alongside security and defence,” he said.
Before
Trump’s comments, US commerce secretary Howard Lutnick said it was unlikely
that Starmer’s efforts with China would pay off.
“The
Chinese are the greatest exporters and they are very, very difficult when
you’re trying to export to them,” he told reporters. “So good luck if the
British are trying to export to China ... it’s just unlikely.”
He played
down the prospect of Trump threatening Britain with tariffs as he did Canada,
adding: “Unless the prime minister of Britain sort of takes on the United
States and says very difficult things, I doubt it.”

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário