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Tuesday, September 30, 2025
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Starmer urges UK to choose decency over division

publish time

30/09/2025

publish time

30/09/2025

LIVERPOOL, England, Sept 30, (AP): Prime Minister Keir Starmer will say Tuesday that Britain faces a stark choice between decency and division, in an attempt to reset his government and stem the rising popularity of the hard-right party Reform UK. Starmer will tell his center-left Labour Party that Britain faces "a fight for the soul of our country” as he tries to overcome dire approval ratings, a sluggish economy and the challenge posed by divisive Reform leader Nigel Farage.

"Britain stands at a fork in the road. We can choose decency or we can choose division. Renewal or decline,” Starmer will say, according to his office. Since Labour won a landslide election victory in July 2024, its popularity has plummeted. The party promised economic growth, but has struggled to deliver it. Inflation remains stubbornly high and the economic outlook subdued, frustrating efforts to repair tattered public services and ease the cost of living.

Treasury chief Rachel Reeves said Monday that wars in Ukraine and the Middle East and US President Donald Trump’s tariffs have caused "harsh global headwinds,” and hard economic choices loom when she sets out her budget in November. Against that gloomy backdrop, Labour’s annual conference in Liverpool - motto: "Renew Britain” - has been dominated by conversations about how to fight Reform.

Farage’s party has topped opinion polls for months, ahead of both Labour and the main opposition Conservatives, despite holding just five of the 650 seats in the House of Commons. Farage’s anti-establishment, anti-immigration message, with its echoes of Trump’s MAGA movement, has homed in on the issue of thousands of migrants in small boats arriving in Britain across the English Channel.

More than 30,000 people have made the dangerous crossing from France so far this year despite efforts by authorities in Britain, France and other countries to crack down on people-smuggling gangs. Farage has vowed to deport everyone arriving by small boat and go even farther, stripping the right to remain in the UK from many legal residents.

Starmer said on the weekend that such a policy would be "racist” and "immoral,” and he has accused Farage of nurturing a "politics of grievance” that turns people against one another. He has expressed alarm that a march organized by anti-immigration campaigner and convicted fraudster Tommy Robinson attracted more than 100,000 people in London this month. Starmer will warn in his speech that the path to renewal is "long, it’s difficult, it requires decisions that are not cost-free or easy.