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Downing Street claims no change in position on recognising Palestinian State following Lammy comments

The foreign secretary told a Lords committee yesterday: ‘We will prefer recognition as a part of a process to two states’

May 1, 2025 13:25
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David Lammy (left) with Palestinian PM Mohamed Mustafa (Image: UK Government).
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A Downing Street spokesperson denied that there had been a shift in the government’s position when it came to recognising a Palestinian state following comments made by the foreign secretary yesterday.

Facing questions from the House of Lords’ International Relations and Defence Committee, David Lammy told peers: “No one has a veto on when the UK recognises that Palestinian state … We have always said that recognition is not an end in of itself and we will prefer recognition as a part of a process to two states.”

Referencing reports that France is lining up its own recognition announcement for this June at a New York conference jointly hosted with Saudi Arabia, he added: “President Macron has had a lot to say about that, most recently, alongside the Saudis, and of course we are in discussion with them at this time.”

His remarks generated intense speculation in the press, with The Guardian reporting that Lammy had confirmed that the UK was “in talks” with Paris over recognition.
However, Downing Street denied there had been a shift in the government’s “longstanding position” in relation to the conflict. Recognising a Palestinian state as part of a contribution to a renewed peace process that would result in a two-state solution remains the UK’s aim, they confirmed.