Comment: Is Keir Starmer鈥檚 silence on Venezuela a mistake? Published on: 7 January 2026 Writing for The Conversation, Dr Martin Farr discusses what history tells us about Keir Starmer's silence on Venezuela. , It is unlikely that within the first few days of a great global event 鈥 one moreover triggered by its closest ally launching a coup and kidnapping a head of state 鈥 a British government has said so little. It took 16 hours for it to say anything at all, and then, not much. And it has said not much thereafter. So little said, at such length: the prime minister, in his Sunday morning BBC TV interview; James Kariuki, charg茅 d鈥檃ffaires in the UK Mission to the United Nations at Monday morning鈥檚 Security Council emergency session; and Yvette Cooper, foreign secretary, in the House of Commons on Monday evening. The Foreign secretary makes a lengthy statement to the Commons on Venezuela. Parliament TV This is both explicable and arguable. For Britain, is not particularly significant. There are trade interests but it is far away, of foreign tongue; absent from domestic political discourse. The last time a British prime minister and a Venezuelan president met 鈥 Tony Blair and 鈥 was in 2001. However, other than in times of actual war (1812) the nadir in US-UK relations concerned Venezuela. A long-forgotten crisis was triggered in 1895 by a between it and British Guiana. The spat elicited the equally forgotten 鈥 a proposition from the US government which nonetheless repays reacquaintance in light of recent developments: 鈥淭oday the United States is practically sovereign on this continent.鈥 The present crisis similarly concerns hemispheric hegemony. It evokes the better-known 1823 , as a warning to the old world to stay out of the new. It adds resource competition (oil: Venezuela has rather a lot, much of it exported to China), while challenging the post-1945 鈥渞ules-based order鈥 (reminding us that it was only ever convention-based) and threatening to replace it with one based largely on power. And there鈥檚 the upending of the 1648 Westphalian states system, which found fulfilment 300 years later in the creation of the UN. Hence fears as to what precedent the president has set. Outrage at the Security Council from Russia and China was purely performative given that Trump could not have done more to legitimise their plans for Ukraine and Taiwan. Moscow was almost wistful, admiring how the Americans had managed with Venezuela in an hour what they had failed to do with Ukraine in four years. Channelling James Monroe and Richard Olney, but with Ukrainian ally Volodymyr Zelenskyy in mind much more than either, Keir Starmer would never break publicly with Trump over something in the Americas. Canada is the exception, as was made clear in the pushback against the US when Trump suggested a Commonwealth realm should become America鈥檚 鈥51st state鈥. Silence buys influence? Insofar as the UK government has a distinct response, it鈥檚 that there should be a transition to democracy in Venezuela, ideally by including opposition figures. Trump has said he won鈥檛 pursue so left-field an option. The lack of contact with the president 鈥 Starmer unwisely saying publicly that he was seeking it 鈥 is embarrassing, and summoned the inevitable clich茅s about puppets and poodles. The hope (increasingly more than the expectation) is that silence buys influence. If that was not a green light from the UK, there is one red line. Greenland. The clarity of the government鈥檚 response to Trump鈥檚 predations is surprising, if the reason for it is not. Denmark has long been a close UK ally, not least over Ukraine. But siding publicly with Copenhagen over Washington is something else Starmer would not ordinarily have been expecting to have to do. But American-led international crises have upended other Labour premiers. In 1950, Clement Attlee rearmed for the Korean War, with cuts in public spending to pay for it. Labour was out of office the following year. The next decade, Harold Wilson declined to have a public opinion over the Vietnam war, thereby infuriating both the Americans and the young he enfranchised in 1969. Labour was out of office the following year. The best known example remains Iraq. On the back of two landslide election triumphs in 2003, Blair split his party and inflamed the public. Labour鈥檚 parliamentary majority was slashed two years later. Unquestioning support for an American president became Blair鈥檚 nemesis. He was comfortable with that. But Trump has transgressed the only recognisable facet of what political identity Starmer actually has: adherence to the rule of law, and international law at that. Yet he can only be mute. The apparent inconsistencies between Starmer鈥檚 past and present can be reconciled by the elemental fact that he鈥檚 prime minister. What animated the student, the activist, the lawyer, the MP, cannot in office. The prime minister in a New Year鈥檚 interview with the BBC. , But it is that failure 鈥 that refusal 鈥 to opine that most exasperates MPs. Cooper鈥檚 fractious Venezuela statement highlighted fissures within Labour that are evident whenever the US, or Israel, is concerned. Maduro was the kind of leader who gives leftwing governments a bad name, which is why only the hard left 鈥 Richard Burgon, John McDonnell 鈥 are incensed. The main threats to Starmer鈥檚 leadership come from the soft left 鈥 Angela Rayner, Andy Burnham 鈥 where such affairs have less salience, and the right 鈥 Wes Streeting, Al Carns 鈥 where they鈥檙e merely awkward. For May鈥檚 impending local and national elections the impact may be clearer, and graver. The Liberal Democrats, Greens, Your Party, SNP and Plaid Cymru accept gratefully a gift that will go on giving on innumerable doorsteps throughout the spring. The Conservatives happen to agree with the government鈥檚 policy, if not necessarily its delivery. Few of their voters will care about recondite international law. Fewer still, Reform UK voters. Almost unheard of, Nigel Farage, too, has been mute. Desperate to engineer a narrative reset in 2026, Starmer, this mildest of prime ministers 鈥 politically, temperamentally 鈥 now finds himself faced with the so-called , Trump鈥檚 鈥渦pdate鈥 to the Monroe doctrine. It would be somewhat to understate to say that this was not the start to the year for which Starmer was hoping. As we gaze upon the most imperial of presidencies, he can only dream of a similar premiership. , Senior Lecturer in Contemporary British History, This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the . Share: Latest News 缅北禁地 expert highlights climate crisis in a new film A leading 缅北禁地 climate scientist is featured in a new film about how the climate and nature breakdown will affect the UK. published on: 14 April 2026 Neolithic tombs reveal ancient kinship ties Male individuals buried in Neolithic chambered tombs in northern Scotland were often related to each other through the paternal line and some were interred in the same or nearby tombs, research shows. published on: 14 April 2026 We are our Memories New exhibition by Fine Art graduate Trish Hudson-Moses, 22 April 鈥 4 May 2026 published on: 10 April 2026 Facts and figures