Ex-BoE deputy governor warns Trump could flick financial payments ‘kill switch’

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Flowers bloom outside the Bank of England building in London on August 4, 225. (REUTERS)
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Updated 18 September 2025
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Ex-BoE deputy governor warns Trump could flick financial payments ‘kill switch’

  • comments come as Trump begins state visit to Britain
  • Many Western countries rely on US banks, Visa and Mastercard

LONDON: Countries that see themselves as US allies are now considering whether President Donald Trump’s administration could one day disrupt their payments systems to exert diplomatic pressure, a former top Bank of England official has said.
Jon Cunliffe, the BoE’s deputy governor for financial stability from 2014 to 2024, said Western countries relied heavily on US-headquartered Visa and Mastercard for day-to-day domestic transactions and found it hard to avoid US banks when making foreign payments.
“What you’ve seen now with Greenland and Canada and other areas is that this particular administration appears to be as likely to use all the levers it has against jurisdictions that you would traditionally think of as its allies as its opponents,” he told an event hosted by Britain’s National Institute of Economic and Social Research late on Tuesday.
“I’ve heard it from people in the payments network: ‘Do I want to use the US system because it might now be weaponized against me?’” Cunliffe added.

Comments come as Trump begins state visit to Britain 
His comments came as Trump began an unprecedented second state visit to Britain after forging a cordial relationship with Prime Minister Keir Starmer.
Cunliffe drew a parallel with some Western countries’ new-found reluctance to buy US fighter jets, possibly due to fears that they could be remotely disabled.
“The question of the ‘kill switch’ which people worry about for F-35s... the issue of the ‘kill switch’ exists in terms of payments.”
Visa and Mastercard suspended operations in Russia in March 2022 after Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
BoE Governor Andrew Bailey told parliament this month he was “very concerned” about Trump’s pressure on the Federal Reserve’s independence.
And at a European Central Bank event on September 3, another former BoE official, Adam Posen, who is now president of the Peterson Institute for International Economics, said it should not be taken for granted that a politicized Fed would lend dollars to foreign central banks in a crisis, as it has done a few times since the 2007-2008 financial meltdown.
Both the BoE and the ECB have already asked lenders to assess their need for US dollars in times of stress, as they game out scenarios in which they cannot rely on tapping the Fed, according to people with knowledge of the discussions.
Asked about this specific risk, Cunliffe said he believed US policymakers would realize it was in their national interest to preserve dollar swap lines to prevent financial turmoil spilling over into US markets.
But he said he would be more concerned if there were an abrupt loss of global confidence in the US dollar at the same time.
“If people don’t want dollars, how do you put the fire out? That looks much more like an emerging market currency crisis.” (Reporting by David Milliken Editing by Kevin Liffey and Gareth Jones)


Jordanian king and British MPs in London discuss Middle Eastern developments

Updated 11 sec ago
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Jordanian king and British MPs in London discuss Middle Eastern developments

  • King Abdullah is scheduled to meet UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and is due to chair a new round of the Aqaba Process initiative
  • He warned that Israel’s illegal actions in the occupied West Bank undermine efforts to restore calm

LONDON: King Abdullah II of Jordan met in London on Monday with former British officials and members of Parliament to discuss the latest developments in the region.

King Abdullah warned that Israel’s illegal actions in the occupied West Bank, which aim to consolidate settlements and impose sovereignty over Palestinian land, undermine efforts to restore calm and threaten to escalate the conflict, according to the Petra news agency.

Discussions also addressed the UK’s role in supporting efforts to restore stability within the region, alongside developments in Jerusalem, Gaza, Syria, and Iran.

Crown Prince Hussein accompanies the Jordanian king, who is scheduled to meet UK Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and is due to chair a new round of the Aqaba Process initiative, launched in 2015, Petra added.