UK’s Starmer says Harris has brought ‘profound change’ to US race

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz (R) and Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer shake hands after a joint press conference following bilateral talks at the Chancellery in Berlin on August 28, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 30 August 2024
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UK’s Starmer says Harris has brought ‘profound change’ to US race

BERLIN: UK leader Keir Starmer has said that US Vice President Kamala Harris replacing President Joe Biden as the Democratic Party’s presidential nominee has shaken up the White House race.

Since Biden, 81, dropped out five weeks ago due to concerns about his age, 59-year-old Harris has reinvigorated her party, edging ahead of Republican candidate Donald Trump in opinion polls.

Delegates rode a wave of optimism as she was officially crowned last week at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, a gathering attended by senior figures from Starmer’s Labour Party.

The British Prime Minister touched on the US election during a huddle with UK political reporters Wednesday during a trip to Berlin, where Starmer met German Chancellor Olaf Scholz.

“There’s obviously been a profound change in the last few weeks,” said Starmer, when asked by AFP if he had been impressed by the energy that Harris has injected into the campaign.

“I think everyone can see that. You saw the convention just in recent days,” he added.

Center-left Labour, back in power in Britain after 14 years in opposition, has long had close links with the Democratic Party, seeing it as a sort of unofficial sister party.

In an interview with the New Statesman magazine published earlier this month, London’s Labour mayor Sadiq Khan said it was “obvious” his support lay with the Democrats.

“I’m a member of the Labour Party — we’re a social democratic party. I want the Democrats to win,” said Khan, who has had a long-running feud with Trump.

“It’s no secret many Labour Party members go and volunteer for the Democrats during presidential elections.

“We shouldn’t pretend otherwise. Many of my staffers helped all three: (Barack) Obama, (Hillary) Clinton and Biden,” Khan added.

Starmer is taking a neutral stance on the election, although experts say a Trump presidency could pose difficulties, particularly with doubts over the Republican’s support for NATO and Ukraine.

It might also be more awkward: Starmer’s foreign minister David Lammy called Trump “a woman-hating, neo-Nazi-sympathizing sociopath” in 2018.

However, Lammy was more diplomatic earlier this year, saying in a speech that Trump’s “attitude to European security is often misunderstood.”

In his comments in the German capital, Starmer said “ultimately, of course, it is going to be a matter for the American people to determine, and we will work with whoever they elect into office.”

“The special relationship we have between our two countries has been there for a very long time, for a very good reason.”


Flights to Ethiopia's Tigray region suspended as clashes erupt

Updated 57 sec ago
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Flights to Ethiopia's Tigray region suspended as clashes erupt

Addis Ababa - ETH
Addis Ababa, Jan 29, 2026 (AFP) - - Clashes between federal and Tigrayan forces have erupted in Ethiopia's northern Tigray region, prompting the suspension of flights, security and diplomatic sources told AFP on Thursday.
The renewed tensions risk a return to conflict in the volatile region, which around three years ago emerged from a brutal war between Ethiopian federal forces and the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF) that killed at least 600,000 people between November 2020 and November 2022, according to the African Union -- a toll some experts say is understated.
Hostilities broke out in recent days in Tsemlet, western Tigray, an area claimed by forces from the neighbouring Amhara region who have refused to withdraw despite a peace agreement signed in Pretoria at the end of 2022 requiring them to do so.
"The situation appears to be deteriorating," the security source said.
A diplomatic source who spoke on condition of anonymity told AFP that the Tigray forces were facing "the ENDF (Ethiopian army) alongside Amhara militias".
"The clashes were confirmed in recent days, but today we don't know the situation," the source added.
A local source, speaking on condition of anonymity, also confirmed the clashes, while the federal army has yet to respond to AFP.
The sources confirmed the suspension of flights to Tigray, which are operated by Ethiopian Airlines, the fully state-owned carrier and the only airline serving the northern region.
The national carrier is yet to reply to AFP.
The TPLF, which once controlled all of Ethiopia before being displaced by Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed's administration, remains banned.
Addis Ababa has accused the group of forging ties with neighbouring Eritrea and "actively preparing to wage war against Ethiopia".
Tensions remain high in Tigray despite the peace agreement that ended the fighting, with several hundred thousand people still displaced.
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