UK Prime Minister In A Step Towards The Nation’s Prosperity Promise A Consistent, Pragmatic Chinese Partnership.
London; January 2026: British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer has reached Beijing with an aspiration of bolstering partnership with Xi Jinping led regime in the process of transforming his country into a more prosperous one.
Alongside a delegation of nearly 60 representatives from British business, sport and culture, the Prime Minister is expected to exhibit peer stability and clarity in the government’s approach, thus making up for years of inconsistency under previous governments. Since taking office, the government has re-engaged with China, with due recognition that it is one of the world’s most consequential powers and its monumental growth has a significant impact on the lives of the British people.
The PM’s entourage constitutes the following delegates:
- Aberdeen Group – Jason Windsor
- AngloAmerican – Stuart Chambers
- Airbus – John Harrison
- Arup – Jerome Frost
- AstraZeneca – Pascal Soriot
- Baker McKenzie – Sunny Mann
- Barclays – Angela Liu
- Birmingham Museums Trust – Sara Wajid
- Bridgepoint Group – Tim Score
- British Airways – Colm Lacy
- Brompton Bikes – William Butler-Adams
- Ceres Power – Warren Finegold
- China Britain Business Council – Sebastian Wood
- Chucklefish – Donna Orlowski
- Clifford Chance – Adrian Cartwright
- CVC – Robert Lucas
- Edinburgh International Book Festival – Jenny Niven
- Feng Ling Productions- Farooq Chaudhry
- Freshfields – Georgia Dawson
- GSK – Sir Jonathon Symonds
- Haleon – Brian McNamara
- Halle – David Butcher
- Heatherwick – Craig Miller
- HSBC – Brendan Nelson
- Holland & Barrett – Anthony Houghton
- Jaguar Land Rover – Pathamadai Balaji
- KPMG – Melissa Geiger
- Mayor of West Midlands – Richard Parker
- Lady Mayor of the City of London – Susan Langley
- Liberty London – Andrea Petochi
- FTSE Russell – Fiona Bassett
- McLaren – Nicholas Collins
- National Galleries of Scotland – Anne Lyden
- National Museums Liverpool – Laura Pye
- National Theatre – Kate Booth
- Natural History Museum – Doug Gurr
- North East Museums – Keith Merrin
- Octopus Energy – Greg Jackson
- Pearson – Omar Abbosh
- Prudential plc – Anil Wadhwani
- PwC – Marco Amitrano
- Relx – YS Chi
- Royal Museums Greenwich – Paddy Rogers
- Royal Philharmonic Orchestra – Sarah Bardwell
- Royal Shakespeare Company – Daniel Evans
- Schroders – Richard Oldfield
- Science Museum Group – Shri Mukundagiri
- Standard Chartered – William Winters
- Table Tennis England – Sally Lockyer
- USTWO Games – Maria Sayans
- V&A Museum – Timothy Reeve
- Visit Britain – Patricia Yates
- World Professional Billiards & Snooker Association – Jason Ferguson
- 8 lions – Jiella Esmat
China is the world’s second largest economy, a crucial player in global supply chains, and a growing military power. It is the UK’s third largest trading partner and supports 370,000 British jobs. In a time of growing global instability, where events abroad continue to rebound on people at home, the Prime Minister has promised to act in the UK’s national interest.
Instead, the PM is expected to demonstrate the nations clear-eyedness and realistic rationale when it matters the opportunities and challenges, they pose, continuing to pursue co-operation in our interest while maintaining guardrails when it comes to our national security.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer said: “For years, our approach to China has been dogged by inconsistency – blowing hot and cold, from Golden Age to Ice Age. But like it or not, China matters for the UK. As one of the world’s biggest economic players, a strategic and consistent relationship with them is firmly in our national interest. That does not mean turning a blind eye to the challenges they pose, but engaging even where we disagree. This is what our allies do, and what I will do: delivering for the public, putting more money in their pockets and keeping them safe through pragmatic, consistent co-operation abroad”.
Alongside a delegation of leading UK businesses and cultural organisations such as HSBC, GSK, Jaguar Land Rover and the National Theatre, the Prime Minister will push for access in areas where better co-operation with China would boost growth and deliver prosperity for the British people. That includes the UK’s world-leading financial services sector, creative industries and life sciences expertise.
However, as expected UK will not trade economic co-operation for their national security, alongside raising areas of disagreement with China. The Prime Minister will meet President Xi Jinping and Premier Li Qiang in Beijing on Thursday for talks on trade, investment and national security, before travelling to Shanghai for a range of engagements with British and Chinese businesses.
Business and Trade Secretary Peter Kyle and Economic Secretary to the Treasury Lucy Rigby will join the Prime Minister on the visit.
This trip follows the successful 2025 Economic and Financial Dialogue (EFD) that secured £600 million in immediate benefits and the first UK-China Joint Economic and Trade Commission (JETCO) since 2018.
Business and Trade Secretary Peter Kyle said: “For a decade, there has been a lack of serious engaging relationship needed to capitalise on the opportunity of a better relationship with China. We want to see trade flourish between us. From financial services to advanced manufacturing and the global energy transition, the UK’s strengths increasingly align with the rapidly evolving Chinese economy. The first duty of government is security, and we protect ourselves best through active engagement and pragmatic cooperation, not by shutting the door”.
Economic Secretary to the Treasury Lucy Rigby said: “The UK’s world-leading financial services sector is a cornerstone of our economy. With deep and liquid markets, and the FTSE hitting all-time highs, there are real opportunities for mutually beneficial cooperation with China which supports jobs for working people and growth for businesses across Britain”.
Colm Lacy, Chief Commercial Officer at British Airways, said: “As the UK’s flag carrier, we are honoured to support the Prime Minister Keir Starmer on this important visit to China. British Airways has a longstanding and proud history of connecting people, cultures and businesses around the world, and this trip reflects the vital role we play in fostering those relationships”. Colm Lacy further added,
“In 2025, we celebrated 20 years of flying to Shanghai, this year marks 90 years of service to Hong Kong, and we are also delighted to recognise the 10th anniversary of our China‑based cabin crew team. We look forward to continuing to serve the region and further strengthen the connections that bring people together, as well as supporting trade and tourism for many years to come”.
Dr Doug Gurr. Director, Natural History Museum has asserted: “For over 15 years, the Museum’s Wildlife Photographer of the Year exhibition has toured to multiple locations in China. During 2025, our scientists co-authored over a hundred papers with Chinese collaborators, as well as facilitating collection and research visits. The museum is also excited to be expanding its commercial activities in the Chinese market from brand licensing to publishing projects. I look forward to building on our existing ties with museum partners in China and to developing new opportunities for collaboration in research, collections, and knowledge exchange”.
Following his trip to China, the Prime Minister will travel to Tokyo to meet with Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi. The UK-Japan partnership continues to grow, with an economic relationship worth over £100 billion which supports 200,000 UK jobs, and deepening ties across security and defence.
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