The longer Iran war goes on, the more likely the impact on our economy, Starmer says

Addressing the war in Iran, Keir Starmer acknowledged that the longer the conflict went on the greater the likely impact on the UK’s economy. The prime minister said:

double quotation markThe job of government is obviously to get ahead, to look around the corner, to work with others, and the chancellor speaks to the governor of the Bank of England on a daily basis, with looking cross-departmental within government, assessing the risks, monitoring and talking to our international partners as well about what more we can do together to reduce the likely impact on people here and businesses here, of course.

But it is important to acknowledge that that work is needed, because people will sense, you will sense I think, that the longer this goes on, the more likely the potential for an impact on our economy, impact into the lives and households of everybody and every business.

And our job is to get ahead of that, to look around the corner, assess the risk, monitor the risks, and work with others in relation to that.

Keir Starmer talks during a visit to a community centre in London.
Keir Starmer talks during a visit to a community centre in London. Photograph: Brook Mitchell/AFP/Getty Images
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Key events

Nigel Farage, the Reform party’s leader, supports regime change in Iran and said last week that Keir Starmer’s “inaction” while the US and Israel bombed Iran was “frankly pathetic”.

He has called for the UK to join Trump’s war in Iran, a view that is wildly at odds with British voters, according to YouGov polling (only 29% support the joint US-Israeli strikes).

A vocal proponent of the “special relationship”, it emerged that Farage did not meet Donald Trump when he travelled to the US president’s Mar-a-Lago residence on Friday, according to a report in the FT, after suggesting he was expecting to meet with him.

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