Sir Keir Starmer has been urged by Labour MPs to put the final nail in the coffin for the Chagos deal after the Prime Minister shelved plans to “surrender” the archipelago.
Labour backbenchers have called on Sir Keir to abandon the plans altogether after it was revealed legislation to ratify the agreement will be omitted from the King’s Speech.
The Government was seeking the ratify the deal – which would see Britain transfer sovereignty of the islands to Mauritius while leasing back the joint US-UK Diego Garcia base on a 99-year agreement.
But a Bill to give the islands away was shelved from the King’ Speech after President Donald Trump’s repeated attacks
The American leader lambasted the deal as an “act of great stupidity” and a “very woke thing”.
Britain cannot legally transfer sovereignty over the islands to Mauritius without American consent under a 1966 treaty between the two countries.
On Sunday, ministers insisted the agreement had not been completely axed yet, suggesting ratification was being paused while Labour attempts to regain the backing of the US.
But now, Sir Keir’s backbenchers have called on him to drop the deal for good to avoid “further embarrassment”
Dan Carden, MP for Liverpool Walton, told The Times: “It’s clear the US administration doesn’t support the Chagos deal, and the Government should make the best of a bad situation and finally drop it.”
Meanwhile, Graham Stringer, MP for Blackley & Middleton South, urged the Prime Minister to “ditch this financially and militarily unjustifiable policy”.
On Sunday, Health Secretary Wes Streeting told the BBC that the Government had “not U-turned on our position on the Chagos Islands”.
He said: “I think it’s fair to say elements of the US administration have had a change of heart.
“We said all the way along, we wouldn’t proceed without American support.”






