Starmer says he will publish witness statements for collapsed China spy trial – UK politics live | Politics

Starmer’s opening statement at PMQs on China spy case

Here is the opening statement that Keir Starmer made at the start of PMQs about the China spy case.

May I update the house or the China spy case. I am deeply disappointed by the outcome. We wanted to see prosecutions. Mr Speaker, I know just how seriously, rightly, you take these matters. National security will always be the first priority of this government. We will always defend against espionage.

In recent weeks, there have been baseless accusations put about by the party opposite. Let me set out the facts.

The relevant period was when these offences took place. That was under the Conservative government between the year of 2021 and 2023.

This period was bookended by the integrated review of 2021, the beginning of the period, and the refresh of that review in 2023, setting out that policy.

These statements of government policy were very carefully worded to not describe China as an enemy.

Instead they stated increased national security protections where China poses a threat and that the then government would engage with China to leave room open for constructive and predictable relations.

The deputy national security adviser [DSNA], Matt Collins, set out the then government’s position in a substantive witness statement in 2023, which was subsequently supplemented by two further short statements.

The cabinet secretary assures me that the DSNA faithfully set out the policy of the then Tory government.

I know first hand that the DSNA is a civil servant of the utmost integrity. And those opposite who worked with him, I’m sure, would agree with that assessment.

Under this government, no minister or special adviser played any role in the provision of evidence.

I can’t say what the position was of the previous government in relation to the involvement of ministers or special advisers. If the leader of the opposition knows the answer to that question, and I suspect that she does, I invite her to update the house.

Last night the Crown Prosecution Service clarified that, in their view, the decision whether to publish the witness statements of the DSNA is for the government.

I’ve therefore carefully considered this question this morning. And, after legal advice, I have decided to publish the witness statement here.

Given the given the information contained, we will conduct a short process.

But I want to publish the witness statements in full.

Let me say this; to be clear, had the Conservatives been quicker in updating our legislation, a review that started in 2015, these individuals could have been prosecuted and we would not be where.

Key events

PMQs – snap verdict

PMQs is not an equal contest. The prime minister gets the last word, which helps, but far more significantly he has executive advantage – information and power – not available to the leader of the opposition. Today Keir Starmer took full advantage of that, surprising MPs with a lengthy opening statement at the start of PMQs. (See 1.21pm.) He was in command right from the start and Kemi Badenoch never seriously challenged him.

Much of what Starmer said was not new. The government has been blaming the Tories for the collapse of the prosecution for days, saying if the Official Secrets Act had been updated earlier, a successful prosecution might be able to go ahead. But what was most striking about Starmer’s performance was the confidence he displayed in rebutting charges of interference, or a cover-up. The fact that he is promising to publish the three witness statements in full shows that he is fairly certain they won’t be incriminating. His assertion that the “substantive” witness statement was the one written when the Tories were in office was significant. His declaration that the final one came before the September meeting attended by Jonathan Powell undermines claims that Powell made an improper intervention. Ministers with something to hide resort to evasion; but Starmer was unambiguous in dismissing the Tory claims as “baseless”. And he was perhaps most impressive right at the end, when he spoke about avoiding political interference in prosecutions being an article of faith for him. (See 12.54pm.)

He was 90% convincing. But Starmer did not explain why, if the evidence was sufficient to justify charging the alleged spies under the Official Secrets Act in 2023, a decision was taken two years later to drop the case. The CPS has explained that on the grounds that the case law changed as a result of a ruling in a separate spy case in the spring, raising the threshold needed for a conviction. Legal experts say the court of appeal ruling in Ivanova and Rossev in fact did the opposite, lowering the threshold and making prosecution easier. If the CPS is right, it needs to explain its case more convincingly.

Badenoch gave no ground and ploughed on regardless. A reasonable person would have listened to Starmer’s case, and decided it might be best waiting until the witness statements are out before performing a judgment. But PMQs does not really allow for that sort of approach, and it is not Badenoch’s style anyway, and she just kept bashing away. Given the paucity of the evidence at her disposal, it was quite an impressive example of resilience, and Tory MPs may have liked it. But she wasn’t winning the argument.

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