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Starmer and Trump agree need to ‘keep up collective pressure on Putin’

30 Mar 2025 2 minute read
US President Donald Trump with Prime Minister Keir Starmer in Washington last month. Photo Carl Court/PA Wire

Sir Keir Starmer and US President Donald Trump have agreed on the need to “keep up the collective pressure on Putin” during a phone call, Downing Street said.

The Sunday night call came after Mr Trump said he was “angry, pissed off” with his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin for questioning the credibility of Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelensky.

The Prime Minister updated the US leader on the latest meeting of the so-called coalition of the willing when they spoke, according to Downing Street.

“Discussing Ukraine, the Prime Minister updated the President on the productive discussions at the meeting of the coalition of willing in Paris this week,” a No 10 spokesperson said.

Pressure

They added: “The leaders agreed on the need to keep up the collective pressure on Putin.”

Russian drone attacks have continued in Ukraine, with strikes taking place on a military hospital, shopping centre and apartment blocks in Kharkiv, the second-largest city in Ukraine, killing two people and wounding more.

In an interview with NBC News, Mr Trump criticised the Russian president for “getting into Zelensky’s credibility”.

The US leader suggested he was considering putting “secondary sanctions” on Russian oil, after Mr Putin continued to claim that Ukraine’s president lacks the legitimacy to sign a peace deal.

Mr Zelensky’s presidential term expired last year but Ukraine cannot hold elections at the moment under its constitution, as martial law has been declared while it is at war with Russia.

Kremlin interference 

Western allies fear that if it did hold a national poll, this would be at risk of interference by the Kremlin.

Mr Trump previously suggested he was open to relaxing US sanctions on Russia as part of the progression in peace talks to end the war in Ukraine.

His open criticism appears to show a change in attitude towards his Russian counterpart, though the US president has insisted they still have a “very good relationship”.

Downing Street said Mr Trump and Sir Keir also discussed plans for a UK-US economic deal, and the US president passed on his best wishes to the King, who recently spent a brief time in hospital this week after experiencing temporary side effects from his cancer treatment.


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Jeff
Jeff
3 days ago

Trump is playing to the crowd. He doesnt care. Starmer is an outlier because the UK for some reason is being dragged into the US sphere of influence and not the EU.

Worry that a signal chat divulged top secret info by idiots. That would not have been the first breach and it is much worse.

Worry that the US are disappearing people that are there legally.

Worry about the health of the globe since this lot cut so much.

Mab Meirion
Mab Meirion
3 days ago

I sent you a signal Jeff about Europe fav wartime magazine…Signal !

Mab Meirion
Mab Meirion
3 days ago
Reply to  Mab Meirion

Too many trigger words, gwgl

Paul
Paul
3 days ago
Reply to  Mab Meirion

Did you mean to add me too or was that a mistake?

Mab Meirion
Mab Meirion
3 days ago
Reply to  Paul

Ha Ha good one…took me too long to get…!

The 40’s magazine ‘Signal’, ring a bell…?

Mawkernewek
2 days ago

So is Starmer still best buddies with Trump despite him threatening tariffs?

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