UK PM Starmer wants to counter rise of far-right by delivering economic change

Britain’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer said he wanted to counter the rise of the far-right in the UK by delivering fundamental change to the economy, despite having to make unpopular choices along the way.

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A week after Alternative for Germany (AfD) won a state election in eastern Germany, Starmer said he was worried about the rise of the far-right across Europe.

“We can see what’s happening in Germany with the recent election, and we can see what’s happening in France and other countries, and I’m worried about the far-right because it’s the snake oil of the easy answer,” Starmer said in an interview with the BBC broadcast on Sunday.

Starmer is interviewed by journalist Laura Kuenssberg at 10 Downing Street on Saturday for his appearance on the BBC’s Sunday Morning political television show. Photo: Jeff Overs / BBC / AFP
Starmer is interviewed by journalist Laura Kuenssberg at 10 Downing Street on Saturday for his appearance on the BBC’s Sunday Morning political television show. Photo: Jeff Overs / BBC / AFP

Far-right riots swept England just weeks after Starmer’s election this summer. The unrest erupted after false reports spread online about the identity of the suspect in a stabbing in Southport, near Liverpool, that left three young girls dead.

  

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