UK has ‘no issues’ with Trump’s Nato challenge, says minister – UK politics live | Politics


UK has ‘no issues’ with Trump’s Nato challenge, says minister

Donald Trump’s comment that he would not defend Nato countries that do not spend enough on defence presents “no issues”, a government minister has said.

Asked about Trump’s comments overnight, health minister Stephen Kinnock told Times Radio on Friday that even before Trump took office the US “has been challenging the other Nato members to step up and boost defence capability and be ready to defend our own back yard”.

According to the PA news agency, he added:

I think it’s absolutely right that we are now seeing, particularly through the leadership of our prime minister, the European arm of Nato coming together and meeting that challenge.

So I think there’s no issues really around the challenge that the United States has set for us as European nations, what’s vitally important now is that we step up and do that.”

Asked whether the UK could trust the US, Kinnock said:

Donald Trump has never said that he thinks the United States should leave Nato, he has never said that he doesn’t believe in article 5, and I think that we absolutely have to hold together as an alliance in defence of freedom and democracy and the values that we cherish.”

Keir Starmer will speak to European leaders on Friday as he presses on with a diplomatic push over Ukraine. Yesterday, Starmer said it would be a “big mistake” to think that Ukraine no longer needs military help because a peace deal is inevitable.

More on that in a moment, but first, here is an roundup of some of the latest developments in UK politics:

  • Ministers are dragging their heels on an investigation into the mistreatment of migrant carers, the country’s largest nursing union has said, as it continues to receive complaints about low pay, substandard accommodation and illegal fees. Nicola Ranger, the general secretary of the Royal College of Nursing, has written to Yvette Cooper, the home secretary, to urge her to speed up her promised investigation into the abuse of foreign care workers.

  • The work and pensions secretary, Liz Kendall, has said helping more people back into a job is the best way to cut the benefits bill, as the chancellor looks for savings ahead of the 26 March spring statement. With Rachel Reeves zeroing in on welfare as a source of potential cuts as she prepares to take action to meet her self-imposed fiscal rules, Kendall said the starting point must be getting people back into work – not numbers on a spreadsheet.

  • Britain will continue to supply intelligence to Ukraine, though the more limited capabilities on offer from London and other European countries will make it difficult to replace the flow halted from the US earlier this week. The UK will also continue to supply its analysis of the raw data, sources said on Thursday, though in line with normal intelligence practice it will not simply pass on US information obtained via long-established sharing arrangements between the two countries.

  • People in London have been breathing significantly cleaner air since the expansion of the ultra-low emission zone (Ulez), a study has found. Levels of deadly pollutants that are linked to a wide range of health problems – from cancer to impaired lung development, heart attacks to premature births – have dropped, with some of the biggest improvements coming in the capital’s most deprived areas.

  • Tens of thousands of children in migrant and refugee families in the UK are being denied access to government-funded childcare because of benefit restrictions linked to their parents’ immigration status, a report says. Having “no recourse to public funds” (NRPF) means parents are not entitled to 30 hours of free childcare and are having to stay home to look after their young children instead of working. This is pushing families into poverty and denying their children the benefits of the early years education available to their peers, the report finds.

  • Reform UK is facing a split at the top after Nigel Farage called one of his most prominent MPs “utterly completely wrong” for calling him the “messianic” leader of a protest party. Farage hit out at Rupert Lowe after the Great Yarmouth MP and former Southampton FC chair criticised his leadership publicly in an interview.

Share

Updated at 

Key events

Kinnock has also been speaking to Sky News this morning about Trump’s comments on defence spending.

The health minister told Sky News:

Donald Trump’s not actually the first president to say that the European arm of Nato needs to step up. More needs to be spent on defence, military capability needs to be made fit for purpose.

Sadly, in our country, we’ve seen our armed forces hollowed out by 14 years of Conservative neglect and incompetence, and it’s about now rebuilding our military capability to look after our own back yard.

And, you know, I think that’s fair enough – the challenge has been laid and we must now show that we are equal to that challenge.”

Health minister Stephen Kinnock is on the morning media round.

Asked how hopeful he was of progress at talks between the US and Ukraine, due to take place next week, health minister Kinnock told Sky News:

It’s very welcome that those talks are taking place, and I think it reflects absolutely what the prime minister has been saying, which is that we’ve got to get Ukraine to the table: nothing about Ukraine without Ukraine.

And what we’re also working to do is to put Ukraine in the strongest possible position for when these talks do start.

The prime minister, I think, has played an outstanding role as a statesman and an honest broker between the United States and Ukraine and our European partners and allies, and those are all the key factors that we need to bring together to deliver a just and lasting peace.”

The Online Safety Act could be used for “bargaining” during trade negotiations after US president Donald Trump showed his support for less regulation of US social media companies, a former culture secretary has said.

Asked on the BBC Radio 4’s Today programme whether there could be trade consequences if the UK government acted against someone like controversial influencer Andrew Tate, Nicky Morgan said:

There could be, and I think what worries a lot of us now who campaigned for the Online Safety Act is that actually the act itself could be up as part of the bargaining on the trade deal, for the very reason, as you say, which is that you know, president Trump appears to want to take a step back from regulation of the platforms, and they’re allowing him to do that, and that will be, I think, a huge retrograde step.

The UK has done the right thing in bringing the Act into force, and this is just the starting point for regulating the platforms.”

UK has ‘no issues’ with Trump’s Nato challenge, says minister

Donald Trump’s comment that he would not defend Nato countries that do not spend enough on defence presents “no issues”, a government minister has said.

Asked about Trump’s comments overnight, health minister Stephen Kinnock told Times Radio on Friday that even before Trump took office the US “has been challenging the other Nato members to step up and boost defence capability and be ready to defend our own back yard”.

According to the PA news agency, he added:

I think it’s absolutely right that we are now seeing, particularly through the leadership of our prime minister, the European arm of Nato coming together and meeting that challenge.

So I think there’s no issues really around the challenge that the United States has set for us as European nations, what’s vitally important now is that we step up and do that.”

Asked whether the UK could trust the US, Kinnock said:

Donald Trump has never said that he thinks the United States should leave Nato, he has never said that he doesn’t believe in article 5, and I think that we absolutely have to hold together as an alliance in defence of freedom and democracy and the values that we cherish.”

Keir Starmer will speak to European leaders on Friday as he presses on with a diplomatic push over Ukraine. Yesterday, Starmer said it would be a “big mistake” to think that Ukraine no longer needs military help because a peace deal is inevitable.

More on that in a moment, but first, here is an roundup of some of the latest developments in UK politics:

  • Ministers are dragging their heels on an investigation into the mistreatment of migrant carers, the country’s largest nursing union has said, as it continues to receive complaints about low pay, substandard accommodation and illegal fees. Nicola Ranger, the general secretary of the Royal College of Nursing, has written to Yvette Cooper, the home secretary, to urge her to speed up her promised investigation into the abuse of foreign care workers.

  • The work and pensions secretary, Liz Kendall, has said helping more people back into a job is the best way to cut the benefits bill, as the chancellor looks for savings ahead of the 26 March spring statement. With Rachel Reeves zeroing in on welfare as a source of potential cuts as she prepares to take action to meet her self-imposed fiscal rules, Kendall said the starting point must be getting people back into work – not numbers on a spreadsheet.

  • Britain will continue to supply intelligence to Ukraine, though the more limited capabilities on offer from London and other European countries will make it difficult to replace the flow halted from the US earlier this week. The UK will also continue to supply its analysis of the raw data, sources said on Thursday, though in line with normal intelligence practice it will not simply pass on US information obtained via long-established sharing arrangements between the two countries.

  • People in London have been breathing significantly cleaner air since the expansion of the ultra-low emission zone (Ulez), a study has found. Levels of deadly pollutants that are linked to a wide range of health problems – from cancer to impaired lung development, heart attacks to premature births – have dropped, with some of the biggest improvements coming in the capital’s most deprived areas.

  • Tens of thousands of children in migrant and refugee families in the UK are being denied access to government-funded childcare because of benefit restrictions linked to their parents’ immigration status, a report says. Having “no recourse to public funds” (NRPF) means parents are not entitled to 30 hours of free childcare and are having to stay home to look after their young children instead of working. This is pushing families into poverty and denying their children the benefits of the early years education available to their peers, the report finds.

  • Reform UK is facing a split at the top after Nigel Farage called one of his most prominent MPs “utterly completely wrong” for calling him the “messianic” leader of a protest party. Farage hit out at Rupert Lowe after the Great Yarmouth MP and former Southampton FC chair criticised his leadership publicly in an interview.

Share

Updated at 



Source link

Leave a Comment