Keir Starmer buys personalised silver cufflinks given by Trump on state visit

A picture


Keir Starmer has bought a pair of personalised silver cufflinks which were given to him by Donald Trump and his wife, Melania, according to the latest transparency records.The cufflinks, which were worth more than £140, were an official gift from the Trumps during the US president’s second state visit last September.They were the second gift from Trump that Starmer has chosen to buy, having paid for a personalised necklace last year.Official rules say the government should keep ministerial gifts worth more than £140 unless the minister in question decides to pay the value over that limit.Downing Street would not reveal the exact value of the cufflinks, which are understood to have been purchased as a gift for the prime minister’s son.

Last year’s visit was a carefully managed affair during which the president received the largest military ceremonial welcome for a state visit in living memory before being hosted by the king at Windsor Castle for a lavish dinner.Starmer gave the president a ministerial red box embossed with the presidential seal and title, and the first lady a silk scarf designed by Ukrainian children.In return he received a personalised silver necklace, personalised silver cufflinks and a personalised golf club.His wife, Victoria, received a pair of women’s cowboy boots.The Cabinet Office said last year Starmer had chosen to buy the necklace, but that the cufflinks, golf club and cowboy boots had all been retained by the department.

The prime minister only recently decided to buy the cufflinks, according to officials.The records show he received a number of other gifts in September worth more than £140.They included a wooden carving from Mahmoud Abbas, the president of the Palestinian National Authority; a personalised rugby shirt, leather boots and beer from the Australian prime minister, Anthony Albanese; and a display model of an AI supercomputer from the technology company Nvidia.All were retained by the department rather than being bought by Starmer.Ministerial gifts can occasionally cause diplomatic controversy, such as when Barack Obama gave Gordon Brown a DVD box set of 25 classic American films during the then prime minister’s visit to Washington in 2009.

Brown in contrast had given the then president an ornamental pen holder crafted from the timbers of the anti-slavery ship HMS Gannet.Gifts from Trump have also previously caused upset, albeit in his private life.The actor Charlie Sheen told The Graham Norton Show in 2016 that Trump had given him fake diamond and platinum cufflinks embossed with “Trump” as a wedding present.
recentSee all
A picture

March cut to UK interest rates more likely after inflation drops to 10-month low; London house prices fall – as it happened

Many economists are predicting the Bank of England will cut interest rates in March, after seeing inflation fall to 3% this morning.The money markets now indicate there’s an 86% chance of a rate cut in March (taking Bank rate down from 3.75% to 3.5%), at next month’s meeting.That’s up from 77% last night, and 65% a week ago

A picture

As real wage growth falls again, Australian workers must feel the economy is rigged against them | Greg Jericho

In 2025 wages grew slower than inflation, which means that wages clearly are not the cause of rising prices. Not only have workers seen their purchasing power decline, but the RBA’s decision to raise interest rates has once again punished them for inflation that was not their fault.Before I go any further, excuse me while I go to the calendar and mark off yet another three months without a wage breakout. It’s a ritual I have been able to do my entire working life.There hasn’t been a wage breakout since I was in primary school, but do not worry, the RBA is still on the watch, ever on alert to raise interest rates in an effort to increase unemployment and lower wage growth

A picture

Is it smarter to have a dumb home? ‘We’ve seen clients unable to flush toilets’

When the smart home devices Elly Bailey was expecting in the post never showed up at her Gold Coast home, she was frustrated. As a technology reviewer, these products were crucial for her work.When she eventually found the cause, she had to laugh. It wasn’t a sticky-fingered neighbour or a rogue delivery driver causing her to miss parcels, but her smart doorbell – the very thing she’d hoped would prevent missed deliveries, and part of exactly the range of internet-connected devices she was meant to be reviewing.“It’s pretty funny,” says Bailey, 33, who goes by the handle @ellyawesome on TikTok, where she has more than 1

A picture

The bogus four-day workweek that AI supposedly ‘frees up’

The front-page headline in a recent Washington Post was breathless: “These companies say AI is key to their four-day workweeks.” The subhead was euphoric: “Some companies are giving workers back more time as artificial intelligence takes over more tasks.”As the Post explained: “more companies may move toward a shortened workweek, several executives and researchers predict, as workers, especially those in younger generations, continue to push for better work-life balance.”Hurray! There’s utopia at the end of the AI rainbow! A better work-life balance!You may have come across similar articles in Fortune magazine and the New York Times. The AI spin brigade is in full force

A picture

Winter Olympics 2026: Mikaela Shiffrin soars to slalom glory; Klæbo wins fifth gold of Games – live

Mikaela Shiffrin is the Olympic champion! She has banished the demons of Beijing 2022 and is back at the top again. She crouches down after crossing the finish line. Shock? Disbelief? Pride? And then a hug from her mother.It has been 12 years since her first Olympic gold in slalom which makes it the longest gap between individual golds in the same event at the Winter Games. She has failed to medal in nine of her 11 Olympic races (all events) since that Sochi slalom win

A picture

‘My DNA is in this car’: Lewis Hamilton revved up for Ferrari in new F1 season

Lewis Hamilton believes he is in the “best place” he has been at Ferrari with a new car that carries his “DNA”.Hamilton’s debut season with Ferrari was disappointing, with the seven-time champion failing to take a podium for the first time and finishing sixth in the drivers’ championship, behind his teammate Charles Leclerc in fifth. By the end, he was clearly disenchanted, describing his season as a “nightmare”.Ferrari have looked promising in pre-season testing and at the third and final test in Bahrain Hamilton, who has regrouped over the winter, presented a buoyant figure, optimistic about the forthcoming challenge.“I’ve gone through quite a bit and left everything, all of last year behind me,” he said