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Starmer says he ‘deeply regrets’ using ‘island of strangers’ phrase

27 Jun 2025 3 minute read
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer in 10 Downing Street, London. Image: Benjamin Cremel/PA Wire

Sir Keir Starmer has said he “deeply regrets” claiming the UK risked becoming an “island of strangers” in an immigration speech that drew comparisons to the language of Enoch Powell.

The Prime Minister said he had not been in the “best state” to give the press conference, in which he insisted on the need for tighter border controls, as he reeled from an alleged arson attack on his family home.

He said he had considered pulling out of the speech after the fire at the property in Kentish Town left him and his wife Lady Victoria Starmer “really shaken up.”

The Prime Minister ended up going through with the conference as planned on May 12, hours after the blaze.

In it, he warned Britain risked becoming “an island of strangers” without tougher immigration controls – rhetoric that sparked an immediate backlash and was denounced by critics, including within Labour ranks, as divisive.

At the time, Downing Street doubled down on the remarks and said Sir Keir “completely rejects” suggestions he had echoed Powell’s infamous “rivers of blood” speech that was blamed for inflaming racial tensions in the 1960s.

“An echo of Powell”

But in an interview for the Observer the Prime Minister struck a more conciliatory tone, saying the language “wasn’t right”.

“I wouldn’t have used those words if I had known they were, or even would be interpreted as an echo of Powell,” he said.

“I had no idea – and my speechwriters didn’t know either. But that particular phrase – no – it wasn’t right. I’ll give you the honest truth: I deeply regret using it.”

He added: “It’s fair to say I wasn’t in the best state to make a big speech… I was really, really worried. I almost said: ‘I won’t do the bloody press conference.’

“Vic was really shaken up as, in truth, was I. It was just a case of reading the words out and getting through it somehow… so I could get back to them.”

Criticism

Critics drew parallels between the phrase and a passage from Powell’s 1968 speech in which he claimed white Britons were at risk of becoming “strangers in their own country”.

The Prime Minister stressed he was not seeking to use the alleged arson attack as an excuse and does not blame his advisers, saying he should have read through the speech properly and “held it up to the light a bit more”.

He also backed down on language in his foreword to the policy document linked to the speech, which said record high numbers of migrants entering the UK under the last government had done “incalculable damage”.

Sir Keir insisted the issue needed addressing because the party “became too distant from working-class people on things like immigration”, but said “this wasn’t the way to do it in this current environment”.


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Amir
Amir
17 days ago

Just say sorry next time.

HarrisR
HarrisR
17 days ago

He’ll break both your legs first but he’s sure to apologise afterwards. That’s Keir, “the Labour lawyer of integrity” or “Mcsweeney’s Hologram, whichever title is current. A bit like the Krays who would slash your face and then buy you a slap up jellied eel supper afterwards . No ‘ard feelings, it’s what we do.

A more pathetic and contemptible figure, and deeply repulsive party, now more difficult to imagine. “Noises off” Keir? So off you trot”

onedragonontheshirt
onedragonontheshirt
17 days ago

Too late, the genie’s out of the bottle. Everyone knows who he really is now.

Marc Evans
Marc Evans
16 days ago

Yes, indeed. But you won’t get any hint of regret let alone apology from Farage making daily attempts to make us fear ‘the stranger in [our] midst’. And worse from the less observed racist scoundrels of Reform.

Charles Coombes
Charles Coombes
16 days ago

Ge needs to read his speeches before he delivers them.

Y Cymro
Y Cymro
15 days ago

And if you believe that BS , will also accept that he never said Israel had the right to stop food water power and medical aid to 2.1 million Palestinians in Gaza live on BBC radio, especially if starvation is used as a weapon of war, which under the 1998 “Rome Statute” is deemed a war crime, therefore former human rights lawyer and current Prime Minister Keir Starmer is complicit and a war criminal.

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