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Page de couverture de Starmer's Mumbai Mission: UK-India Trade Bonanza Amid Antisemitism Storm at Home

Starmer's Mumbai Mission: UK-India Trade Bonanza Amid Antisemitism Storm at Home

Starmer's Mumbai Mission: UK-India Trade Bonanza Amid Antisemitism Storm at Home

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Keir Starmer BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Keir Starmer has commanded headlines this week as he embarks on what’s being described as a historic and high-stakes first official visit to India as Prime Minister. Flying into Mumbai on Wednesday, Starmer landed alongside the largest UK trade delegation ever seen in India—an entourage of more than a hundred CEOs, business leaders, and ministers, all eager to cement economic ties. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi extended a public and very warm welcome on social media, describing the summit as a chance to advance a “shared vision of a stronger, mutually prosperous future.” Starmer, determined to keep the focus firmly on trade, made clear to reporters en route that visa relaxation—a perennial sticking point—was off the table, emphasizing that the new trade deal was all about income, jobs, and long-term growth for both nations. According to government projections cited in The Economic Times and NDTV, the freshly minted UK–India Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement, or CETA, is poised to boost UK GDP by nearly five billion pounds and turbocharge bilateral trade. Scottish whisky makers, in particular, are beaming: tariffs are dropping, potentially opening the door for a 1 billion pound annual export surge, and Starmer’s team is keen for this trade windfall to translate into jobs across the UK.

Not just business: both leaders are also set to give keynote speeches at the Global Fintech Fest in Mumbai, a splashy event with global attention and plenty of photo ops. But even as Starmer basks in diplomatic limelight abroad, the domestic headlines have been spicier. The Independent reports that Starmer wrote pointed commentary in The Times, calling campus protests on the October 7th anniversary of the Hamas attacks in Israel “un-British” and reaffirming his government’s stance against antisemitism. This rhetoric, aimed squarely at the aftermath of a deadly synagogue attack in Manchester just days ago, places Starmer at the heart of Britain’s fraught conversation about antisemitism and security.

Adding to the storm, TalkTV and others note that Labour’s Deputy PM David Lammy faced heavy heckling at the Manchester vigil, with critics blaming the government for alleged failures on antisemitism. Social media feeds have alternated between sharing images of Starmer mingling with Indian business leaders and outraged clips from the vigil. Some commentators are speculating that Starmer’s high-profile foreign engagements conveniently distance him from the current domestic turmoil, although such claims remain unconfirmed. With his party feeling the pressure from the populist right in recent polls, every move abroad and at home is now magnified. For Starmer, these days will likely mark a pivotal chapter—deal-making in Mumbai and damage-control in Manchester—shaping both his legacy and Labour’s fortunes for months to come.

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