US President Donald Trump (left) speaks during a joint press conference with Britain’s Prime Minister Keir Starmer following their meeting at Chequers, in Aylesbury, central England, on September 18, 2025. Photo: ANDREW CABALLERO-REYNOLDS / AFP.
US President Donald Trump criticized outgoing British Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Monday after the Labour leader announced he would resign, saying he had “really hurt himself” over energy, immigration and his handling of relations with Washington.
“I think he’s a lovely man,” Trump told reporters at an Oval Office event, before accusing Starmer of mishandling Britain’s energy policy by failing to exploit North Sea oil and allowing “windmills all over the place.”
“The UK buys much of its energy. You know where? Norway. You know where they get their oil? The North Sea,” Trump said. “The UK has a much better portion of the North Sea — they don’t want to do it for environmental purposes.”
Trump, who had predicted Starmer’s departure in a Truth Social post, said the British leader was “sort of a friend of mine” but had not been supportive enough of the United States on NATO and the Iran war.
The leaders had clashed over the use of British military bases in Cyprus to conduct strikes in Iran, with the US leader voicing disappointment that Britain took too long to approve the US request to use RAF Akrotiri in Cyprus to bomb Iranian targets.
“He said we can’t use the island to land. That was a first,” Trump said, adding that Starmer had eventually relented but that “was a bad move” that “hurt him badly.”
“I wish him well,” Trump said. “But he’s got two problems: energy and immigration — and crime. But energy and immigration. He’s really hurt himself very, very badly.”
Starmer announced Monday that he would resign as Labour leader but remain prime minister during an orderly transition, after months of pressure from party lawmakers and collapsing domestic authority following poor local and regional election results.
Veteran Labour politician Andy Burnham, the former mayor of Greater Manchester, is widely expected to succeed him after returning to Parliament, potentially making him Britain’s seventh prime minister in a decade.
AFP



