Home news Starmer ‘ruling nothing out’ on Trump tariffs but plays down trade war fears – UK politics live | Politics

Starmer ‘ruling nothing out’ on Trump tariffs but plays down trade war fears – UK politics live | Politics

by wellnessfitpro

Starmer says trade war ‘in nobody’s interest’ and government will take ‘calm, pragmatic approach’

Keir Starmer starts by saying he spoke to President Zelenskyy on Monday, and Zelenskyy asked Starmer to thank Hoyle for attending.

On tariffs, Starmer says:

A trade war is in nobody’s interest and the country deserves, and we will take, a calm, pragmatic approach.

That is why constructive talks are progressing to agree a wider economic prosperity deal with the US. That is why we are working with all industries and sectors likely to be impacted.

Our decisions will always be guided by our national interests, and that’s why we have prepared for all eventualities, and we will rule nothing out.

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Key events

Reeves suggests she is not backing calls for OBR to be required to update its forecasts just once a year, not twice

Reeves says it is important to have just one major fiscal event a year. In the last parliament there were many, and that created uncertaintly.

Q: Is it is important to you to have two forecasts every year? Because obviously that constrains you.

Reeves says she does not feel that. She says she chose to update her plans in the light of the OBR forecast. But she goes on:

We could have chosen to say we would address issues of the headroom the budget, but I did think it was important to show how important we take fiscal sustainability, fiscal stability, and so that’s why we made the decisions we did.

This is interesting. In his column in the Observer on Sunday Andrew Rawnsley said Keir Starmer now agrees with the many commentators who think having the OBR revise its forecasts every six months is distorting policy making. Rawnsley wrote:

[The OBR] also made life difficult for the chancellor in the short-term by telling her that she’d bust her rules unless she made additional spending reductions. The complaint is that policymaking has become too subservient to satisfying OBR guesstimates about what growth and debt might be in five years. I have it on exceedingly good authority that the prime minister himself has come to the view that it is unhelpful, to the point of being barmy, that the government has to live in dread of an OBR report card every six months, rather than face an annual verdict at budget time.

(I have no idea who Rawnsely’s source was, but “on exceedingly good authority” is the sort of thing columnists write when they have recently had a private chat with the PM.)

The Rawnsley column suggests Starmer would like to change the rules so that the OBR only updates its forecasts once a year. Reeves’ reply just now implies she is happy with the status quo.

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