Keir Starmer denies calling for UK to stay in European Medicines Agency despite records showing he did

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer has denied saying the UK should stay in the European Medicines Agency (EMA) despite official records showing he called for just that at least twice in the past.

Speaking during Prime Minister’s Questions today on the response to the pandemic, Boris Johnson said: “If we had listened to [Sir Keir] we would still be at the starting blocks because he wanted to stay in the European medicines agency and said so four times from that despatch box.”

But Sir Keir responded: “Complete nonsense. Don’t let the truth get in the way of a pre-prepared gag.

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“The Prime Minister knows I’ve never said that, from this despatch box or anywhere else, the truth escapes him.”

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer. Photo: PALabour leader Sir Keir Starmer. Photo: PA
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer. Photo: PA

However, Hansard - which is the official records of exchanges in Parliament - shows that twice in January 2017, when SIr Keir was Shadow Brexit Secretary, he said the EMA should be one of the parts of the EU the UK should remain a part of after Brexit.

Mr Johnson pulled faces and puffed his cheeks in response to Sir Keir’s answer.

Conservative former minister Mark Francois later raised a point of order in a bid to correct the record and highlight Sir Keir’s previous remarks.

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A spokesperson for Sir Keir later said: “On a number of occasions the Prime Minister has wrongly claimed that Labour wanted to join the EU’s vaccine programme. That is inaccurate and the claim has been found to be untrue.

“This afternoon during Prime Minister’s Questions, Keir misheard the Prime Minister and assumed he was making the same false accusation again.

“Keir accepts that, on this occasion, the Prime Minister was referring to old comments about the European Medicines Agency and Keir admits he was wrong and made a mistake in his response.

“It’s not Labour policy to join either the European Medicines Agency or the EU vaccine programme. We have never called for the UK to be in the EU vaccine programme. We remain committed to working with the Government to ensure we can be the first in the world to roll out the vaccine.”

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Opening Prime Minister’s Questions, Sir Keir earlier questioned why further measures had not been taken at the country’s borders.

He said: “Today we’re likely to hit 10m vaccinations, which is remarkable. The biggest risk to the vaccine programme at the moment is the arrival of new variants such as the South African variant.

“On that issue, the Government’s own scientists Sage said two weeks ago, and I quote, ‘only a complete pre-emptive closure of borders or the mandatory quarantine of all visitors upon arrival can get close to fully preventing new cases or new variants’. So, pretty clear.

“So why did the Prime Minister choose not to do the one thing that Sage said could prevent new variants coming to the UK?”

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Mr Johnson replied: “Actually, Sage did not recommend a complete ban and they say travel bans should not be relied upon to stop the importation of new variants.

“But we do have one of the toughest regimes in the world.”

He added: “They will have an isolation assurance agency checking up on them and it is illegal now to go on holiday in this country, it is illegal to travel from South Africa or all the countries on the current red list and we will be going forward with a plan to ensure people coming into this country from those red list countries immediately have to go into Government-mandated quarantine hospitality.”

Sir Keir countered: “He doesn’t seem to dispute that, he says it simply wasn’t a recommendation.

“I would ask the Prime Minister to publish the full Sage minutes so that we can see what was said in full or if there’s some other advice, perhaps publish that.”

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Mr Johnson replied: “It is not practical completely to close off this country as he seems to be suggesting. What is practical to do is have one of the toughest regimes in the world and to get on with vaccinating the people of this country.”

Sir Keir went on to ask why the Prime Minister thinks that new variants will “only arrive in the UK from direct flights”.

Mr Johnson responded: “(Sir Keir) can’t have it both ways. He simultaneously says that he wants the borders to be kept open for freight reasons or to allow businesses to carry on, I think that was what he was saying, whilst calling for tougher quarantine measures, which is exactly what this Government imposed as soon as we became aware of the new variant.”

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