British opposition Labor Party Leader Keir Starmer delivers a speech during the 'Labor and Civil Society Summit' in London, Britain, Jan. 22, 2024. (Credit: Suzanne Plunkett/File Photo/Reuters)
British Labor leader Keir Starmer said on Sunday there should be a lasting ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, setting out his stance before parliament is expected to debate a conflict that has caused division in the opposition party.
With Labor well ahead in the polls before an election later this year, Starmer is keen to present a united front to voters, but the war in Gaza has tested that unity.
Nearly a third of his lawmakers defied him last year to back calls for an immediate ceasefire and the party had to withdraw support for a candidate over his comments about Israel earlier this month.
This week, the Scottish National Party is expected to bring a motion to parliament to call for an immediate ceasefire — something Starmer's foreign policy chief David Lammy said the party would examine and then come to a decision on.
Addressing the Scottish Labor conference, Starmer said: "What we all want to see ... [is] an end to the fighting not just now, not just for a pause, but permanently. A ceasefire that lasts ... that is what must happen now."
He added that any ceasefire could not be one-sided.
Earlier, Starmer, like Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, had called for a "sustainable ceasefire" and his aides said his words did not amount to a change in position.
Starmer said on Sunday there should be a lasting ceasefire
between Israel and Hamas, setting out his stance before
parliament is expected to debate a conflict that has caused
division in the opposition party.
With Labor well ahead in the polls before an election later
this year, Starmer is keen to present a united front to voters,
but the war in Gaza has tested that unity.
Nearly a third of his lawmakers defied him last year to back
calls for an immediate ceasefire and the party had to withdraw
support for a candidate over his comments about Israel earlier
this month.
This week, the Scottish National Party is expected to bring
a motion to parliament to call for an immediate ceasefire — something Starmer's foreign policy chief David Lammy said...
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