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Home » Why Starmer’s China trip has come at the worst possible time – UK Times
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Why Starmer’s China trip has come at the worst possible time – UK Times

By uk-times.com27 January 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
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Why Starmer’s China trip has come at the worst possible time – UK Times
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Brexit and beyond

When Keir Starmer jets off to Beijing today, he will be the first prime minister to visit China in eight years.

But instead of a potential history-making journey or even the controversy of his visit, the prime minister may nervously be considering the fate of Margaret Thatcher in 1990 given his current travails with Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham.

Back then, the Iron Lady went to a dinner in the Palace of Versailles to celebrate the end of the Cold War in the midst of a vote on her leadership. After failing to get enough votes to see off Michael Heseltine, she came out of the dinner with her fate sealed and returned home to find she had in effect been deposed.

While Sir Keir has not quite reached the same crisis point in his premiership, it is fair to say that the plotting to remove him is now in full swing – whether it is attempts by Mr Burnham to return to parliament or the machinations of his health secretary Wes Streeting or former deputy prime minister Angela Rayner.

Starmer and Xi met last year at the G20 in Brazil

Starmer and Xi met last year at the G20 in Brazil (Getty)

So this is maybe not the best time for a five-day trip to Beijing. While he is away the plotting will only intensify, amid growing anger over the decision to block Mr Burnham from running in the Gorton and Denton by-election.

Meanwhile the prime minister, who has been touring the tea rooms in recent weeks to calm the nerves of Labour MPs, will not be there to deal with it.

Sir Keir may have until the local elections in May before facing a reckoning, but a showdown seems to be coming sooner rather than later.

But there are other issues with this trip to China which the PM will have to explain more publicly – not least the controversial nature of what some will see as going and bending the knee at the court of President Xi Jinping.

‘Never here Keir’

Opponents will relish the opportunity to dust off the “never here Keir” jibe – the suggestion that Starmer is too often overseas – but the prime minister is determined to end what he has dubbed an “ice age” under previous Tory governments, and improve Britain’s ties with China.

The last PM to make the journey was Theresa May who went on an official visit in 2018, in what was a rare break from the Brexit travails back home that eventually forced her to step down.

But as Sir Keir flies to Beijing, the world is the most unstable it has been for a generation.

His relationship with Donald Trump appears to have hit its lowest point yet, with the US president openly mocking him about the Chagos Islands deal and threatening tariffs on the UK for supporting Denmark over Greenland.

Worse still has been the insult to British veterans who fought in Afghanistan supporting American troops. And the fact that Sir Keir is yet to accept the invitation to join Trump’s peace board for Gaza was a sign that things have gone badly awry.

This means Sir Keir’s careful positioning of the UK as “the bridge” between America and Europe is all but dead as a policy.

The super embassy decision and spies

It is no coincidence that the trip to China comes just days after his government gave permission for a new super embassy in central London, despite security warnings from MI5.

There are also awkward questions over whether the deal with Mauritius to hand over the Chagos Islands to them will open the door to China – an issue which is vexing the Trump administration.

An aerial view of Royal Mint Court, the site for the new Chinese Embassy near Tower Bridge

An aerial view of Royal Mint Court, the site for the new Chinese Embassy near Tower Bridge (Getty)

There are other issues too. China’s ongoing persecution of political dissidents in Hong Kong and abandonment of the agreement with the UK when it was handed over to them in 1997. The imprisonment of British citizen Jimmy Wu is an ongoing sore. Not to mention the persecution of the Uyghurs.

Then there are the problems of Chinese operatives acting against dissidents in the UK, China stealing UK copyright material and the dangers of Chinese companies investing in universities and infrastructure.

And, of course, the anger over the abandonment of a trial of two suspected Chinese spies in parliament still blamed on Sir Keir and his government by many.

All these issues and more make Sir Keir’s visit extremely controversial to say the least.

Going for growth

But the reality is that the prime minister – just as his chancellor Rachel Reeves did last year – needs to go and ask for Chinese investment in the UK.

The economic problems, the lack of growth, the departure of the wealthy and the international turmoil means that the UK cannot spurn Chinese investment. Starmer, like the leaders of France and Germany who have both visited Beijing in recent months, is in many ways going cap in hand.

But in a world lacking in stability and with the UK struggling to find its place, Sir Keir has little choice but to head to China and make his case.

In reality though, he is simply carrying on the policy of the previous Tory governments of engagement with Beijing while being suspicious of the Chinese Communist Party and protecting against its excesses.

But as Sir Keir flies out to build something for the future of the UK and his own government, he may well be wondering how long he personally has to deliver as prime minister. The flight to China could all too easily become a legacy trip, just as it did for Baroness May’s failing government.

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