Comment: Starmer meets Trump: assiduous planning and deft diplomacy Published on: 3 March 2025 Writing for The Conversation, Martin Farr discusses the meeting between Sir Keir Starmer and Donald Trump. , , Keir Starmer was only the second European leader to visit Donald Trump鈥檚 second White House. The first, France鈥檚 Emmanuel Macron, had barely taken off when Starmer touched down, but had already raised the bar by in front of the world鈥檚 media alongside his fellow president in the Oval Office. In manner, Macron manifested his eight years in office (four of which were already spent with Trump in the White House). Starmer has had a mere eight months. But it was a challenge, judged in its own immediate terms, that the prime minister met. Raising the curtain, in a highly untypical coup de th茅芒tre, Starmer flourished 鈥 as few can 鈥 a letter from the King to give to the president, and then effectively forced Trump to read it on camera and agree to the invitation enclosed within. Starmer of course knew he was nudging an open door: much came down to assiduous preparation. The British Embassy, , worked overtime to choreograph and lubricate. Starmer had been wise in contradicting Trump only indirectly. Nothing could be gained 鈥 鈥 from doing so publicly. So early an offer of a state visit to the UK ran the risk of appearing desperate, but was mitigated by its also being 鈥渦nprecedented鈥 as the second to be offered to Trump. A word recently worn smooth by over-use, there was nevertheless another precedent set in the suggestion of a between Trump and the king. With this president, more than any other, royal diplomacy is a critical national asset. Starmer鈥檚 announcement of an increase in defence spending to 2.5% of GDP by 2027 worked similarly well. That funds are to be diverted from foreign aid for that purpose the Labour leadership deemed as being politically cost-free 鈥 or at least good value 鈥 politically. It was, indeed, . The relevant minister . It is hard to recall greater shifts in a country鈥檚 foreign policy in so short a space of time. Insofar as one can discern Trump鈥檚 purposefulness, it is to create pandemonium, which has the secondary effect of galvanising actors to act 鈥 not least for fear of further pandemonium. Thus last week the US voting with Russia, Iran and North Korea, and not with Britain, at the UN. The Trump administration鈥檚 designation of choice is now 鈥渢he Russia-Ukraine conflict鈥, as if it were merely a border dispute. Therefore, ahead of Starmer鈥檚 arrival in Washington, he was faced with the US apparently aligning itself with a country his describes as to the UK. 鈥淛aw-dropping鈥 was the adjective of choice for more than a few informed observers who had thought themselves prepared for whatever may transpire. The actors Trump primarily wishes to galvanise are European leaders, recalcitrants he thinks should do more to keep their own peace. For Macron to have been told that Putin would accept Nato forces policing the peace was scene-changing, but the only witness to the veracity of that news was Trump, who exhales untruths as easily as he breathes. The Russians soon denied it. A very special man. , Macron鈥檚 offer of France鈥檚 (non-Nato) airborne nuclear force complemented Starmer鈥檚 commitment to British boots on the ground and helped him elicit Trump鈥檚 commitment to mutual defence. But Trump guaranteeing the peace that Starmer and Macron are willing to police was the cherry conspicuously missing from the cake. The suggestion was subject to a classic Trump equivocation (we鈥檒l always support the Brits, but they won鈥檛 need our support). For the British government, July鈥檚 election already resembles a hospital pass. The effect of 20% tariffs on GDP growth could be catastrophic. Trump鈥檚 talk of tariff-free trade deals was more than expected, but one such without much being doing about, before it was . This time, Trump has said his vice president is drawing up a plan, even that being absent before. And in a categorical demonstration of the benefits of lobbying there was effective presidential approval of , simultaneously shooting one of Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch鈥檚 few foxes stone dead. Warm words Thus has passed the most potentially difficult meeting of a prime minister and a president since Suez. Nothing else comes close. Cliche 鈥 eggshells, tightropes 鈥 proliferated in previews. When Starmer was last at the White House, in September, he had asked Biden for a meeting about Ukraine and received it. However unsatisfactory the outcome, public face was maintained. Trump has the ability 鈥 and the form 鈥 to have humiliated in a way which would permanently have scarred Starmer. That he did the opposite ought not to distract from the vulnerability of the supplicant. 鈥楪o on, open it鈥. , Instead there were encomia from Trump as to the two countries 鈥 鈥渟pecial relationship鈥, 鈥渦nique friendship鈥, 鈥渇antastic country鈥, 鈥淚鈥檝e always cared鈥 鈥 and of Starmer 鈥 鈥渁 special man鈥, 鈥渁 very special person鈥. And in describing Starmer鈥檚 accent as 鈥渂eautiful鈥, the president revealed the hitherto unknown allure of the adenoidal. Power plays sit ill with Starmer, but he nonetheless ventured two corrections from his armchiar, one to a statement made by the president and another to one made by the vice-president. The subsequent praise for Starmer鈥檚 negotiating tenacity from Trump, that much-vaunted artist of the deal, was as priceless 鈥 and unfamiliar 鈥 as the following morning鈥檚 front pages. However successful this visit, however, nothing can be assumed, still less guaranteed. That the British government would so extensively war-game a meeting with its closest ally tells its own tale, or, rather a tale perhaps yet to be told. At this moment, for the next four years the relationship at least feels more secure than it did a few days before the trip. By such diurnal turns are the affairs of allies now measured. , Senior Lecturer in Contemporary British History, This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the . 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