Blitz Bureau
NEW DELHI: Keir Starmer’s resignation is unlikely to derail India-UK relations, but it may briefly slow the pace of decision-making in London. The biggest pillar of the relationship — the India-UK Free Trade Agreement — is already on strong ground.
The UK government says the FTA will enter into force on 15 July 2026 and is expected to increase bilateral trade by £25.5 billion annually in the long run. It also aims to reduce tariffs, simplify customs and support businesses in both countries.
For India, the leadership change matters mainly in three areas: trade implementation, immigration policy and strategic cooperation. If Andy Burnham or another Labour leader takes over, New Delhi will watch whether the new Prime Minister keeps Starmer’s India focus intact. Any tougher British line on immigration could affect Indian students, workers and professionals, although business mobility under the trade framework may remain protected.
Defence, technology, clean energy, healthcare and education ties are likely to continue because they are based on long-term national interests, not only on one leader’s preference. Overall, Starmer’s exit may create short-term uncertainty, but the India-UK partnership is expected to remain stable, pragmatic and trade-driven.
The FTA figures are based on the UK government’s trade-deal summary, while Reuters has reported that Starmer’s exit is being handled as an orderly transition


