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Britain’s economic situation will not all ‘return to normal’ once the Strait of Hormuz has reopened, Keir Starmer has warned. The UK prime minister also insisted the UK must ‘take a different course’ for its future than returning to the ‘status quo’, which had been pursued after other economic shocks like the 2008 financial crash and the Covid pandemic, as he sought to signal to voters that he understands their discontent. Starmer made the warning in an interview with BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, when he was asked about the economic impact of the US-Israeli war with Iran. Tehran has blocked shipping out of the Strait of Hormuz since the early days of the war, and has been met with a tit-for-tat blockade of tankers coming into its ports by the US. The stranglehold on the shipping route, through which a fifth of global oil usually flows, has played havoc with countries’ economies across the world. Speaking to the BBC, Starmer said: ‘My strong view is that many, many voters, many people across the country are frustrated that they haven’t seen the change they want to see in this country. We’ve flatlined for the best part of 20 years. ‘And I’ll tell you why I think that is. That is because each time we have a crisis like this, whether it’s the 2008 crash, whether it’s Brexit, Covid, the government of the day aspires to get back to the status quo as quickly as possible. ‘But the status quo wasn’t working. And therefore, we cannot do that again. We have to take a different course in response to this crisis.’ Asked if he was preparing the public for an inflation spike caused by the Iran oil crisis by comparing it with previous global events, Starmer said: ‘I am. And the reason is because we’ve got a war on two fronts. ‘I think we obviously have to pull together countries to get the Strait of Hormuz open. And that’s what I’m doing in the coalition I’m leading with President Macron that we have been working very hard on in recent weeks and we need to get the Strait opened as quickly as possible. ‘But even when that happens, I don’t want anybody to think that once the Strait of Hormuz is open, it all returns to normal. It won’t be like that.’ He added: ‘There’s then the war in Ukraine and all the indicators are that the world is going to get more volatile, not less volatile.’ Moving away from the status quo requires making Britain ‘more resilient’, the prime minister said, pointing to his plans to forge closer ties with Europe, and the transition towards green energy. It comes as Iran’s state-run IRNA news agency said the country has handed over its latest proposal for negotiations with the US to mediators in Pakistan. US President Donald Trump later said he was ‘not satisfied’ with the proposal, but did not elaborate any further. By David Lynch, Press Association Political Correspondent Press Association: News source: PA Copyright 2026 Alliance News Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
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