WASHINGTON, Jan 30: Prime Minister Keir Starmer said on Friday it would be foolish for Britain not to engage with China, rejecting an assertion from U.S. President Donald Trump that it was dangerous to get into business with Beijing.
Starmer is the latest Western leader to visit China seeking an economic and geopolitical hedge against Trump's unpredictability, angering the U.S. leader. Last week, Trump threatened to impose tariffs on Canada after Prime Minister Mark Carney struck economic deals with Beijing.
Starmer's three hours of talks with President Xi Jinping on Thursday resulted in China agreeing to cut tariffs on UK whisky and to relax visa rules, as well as what Britain said was progress on market access for its professional services sector.
"It would be foolhardy to simply say we will ignore (China)," Starmer told the BBC in an interview in Shanghai, highlighting French President Emmanuel Macron's recent visit and a planned trip by German Chancellor Friedrich Merz.
"For the UK to be the only country that refuses to engage would not be in our national interest."
The main investment deal of the trip, however, flowed in the opposite direction. British drugmaker AstraZeneca committed to invest $15 billion in China, although some smaller Chinese investments in Britain were also announced. "REUTERS