New British leader vows his nation will reengage on global leadership

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Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer addresses the 79th session of the United Nations General Assembly, Thursday, Sept. 26, 2024, at U.N. headquarters. (Leon Neal/Pool Photo via AP)

TANZANIA – New British Prime Minister Keir Starmer took the international stage at the U.N. General Assembly on Thursday for the first time with a message: His nation is returning to ā€œresponsible global leadership.ā€

The Labour Party leader, who won a landslide election victory in July, told the annual gathering of world leaders that with him as prime minister, ā€œthe U.K. will lead again tackling climate change at home and internationally, and restoring our commitment to international development.ā€

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Working with other nations, Starmer said, Britain will also tackle conflicts from Gaza and the West Bank to Ukraine and Sudan where immediate cease-fires are urgently needed.

He said nations must also work together ā€œto make the world less dangerous.ā€

ā€œWe have to face some hard truths,ā€ the prime minister said. ā€œThe institutions of peace are struggling, underfunded, under pressure and outpoliticized.ā€

He said the entire global system of arms control and combating the proliferation of weapons which has been constructed over decades ā€œhas begun to fall awayā€ and needs global action.

ā€œWe will also change how the U.K. does things,ā€ Starmer said. ā€œMoving from the paternalism of the past towards partnership for the future — listening a lot more, speaking a lot less."

He said the U.K. will also be offering other countries ā€œgame-changing British expertise,ā€ and will work together with nations ā€œin a spirit of equal respect.ā€

Starmer told assembled ministers and diplomats that ā€œa sense of fatalism has taken holdā€ in an age people describe as polarized and full of impunity and instability.

ā€œWell, our task is to say: No. We won’t accept this slide into greater and greater conflict, instability and injustice,ā€ he said. ā€œInstead, we will do all we can to change it.ā€

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Edith M. Lederer, chief U.N. correspondent for The Associated Press, has been covering international affairs for more than 50 years. See more of AP’s coverage of the U.N. General Assembly at https://apnews.com/hub/united-nations


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