David Lammy refuses to criticise US for not backing UN resolution condemning Russian invasion – as it happened

Starmer, Farage and Badenoch all likely to face difficult byelection challenge after Mike Amesbury MP jailed for assault
Mike Amesbury MP has been sentenced to 10 weeks in jail after pleading guilty to assault last month, the BBC is reporting.
That means campaigners can start organising a petition to hold a recall byelection in his constituency, Runcorn and Helsby, assuming he does not resign as an MP. These petitions have almost always been successful (ie they have almost always reached the threshold of 10% of voters required for a byelection to take place).
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Key events
Afternoon summary
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David Lammy, the foreign secretary, has declined an invitation to criticise the US for not backing a United Nations resolution condemning the Russian invasion of Ukraine. (See 5.25pm.) The vote highlighted the growing rift between the US and Europe on Ukraine policy. In the Commons a senior Tory was among those MPs criticising President Trump for his pro-Russian stance. (See 4.52pm.) In his own statement Lammy played down divisions between London and Washington on this issue, and Keir Starmer, in an earlier speech to a summit in Kyiv to mark the third anniversary of the start of the way, said that Trump had “changed the global conversation” on Ukraine in a postive way and that this had “created an opportunity” for peace. (See 11.43pm.)
There were two key votes on Ukraine resolutions at the UN general assembly.
The US voted against a resolution co-sponsored by Ukraine and EU nations. The text of that one is here.
UN General Assembly ADOPTS resolution “Advancing a comprehensive, just and lasting peace in Ukraine”; calls for deescalation, early cessation of hostilities and peaceful resolution of the war against Ukraine
RESULT
In favor: 93
Against: 18
Abstain: 65 pic.twitter.com/VhQ5Y1W2il— UN News (@UN_News_Centre) February 24, 2025
But the US abstained on another resolution, originally tabled by the US but amended to include a reference to the Russian invasion.
Lammy refuses to criticise US for not backing UN resolution condemning Russia’s invasion and upholding Ukraine’s unity
Chris Law (SNP) asks Lammy if he will condemn the US for not voting for the UN motion condemning the invastion of Ukraine.
Lammy says the UK co-sponsored the motion, voted for it and will support Ukraine forever.
He declined to criticise the US for the way it voted.
Jane Clinton has more on the the vote on our Ukraine live blog. She says:
The United States was forced to abstain in a United Nations General Assembly vote on Monday on a resolution it drafted to mark the third anniversary of Russia’s war in Ukraine after the 193-member body agreed to amendments proposed by European states.
The amendments made to the US resolution included adding references to the full-scale invasion of Ukraine by Russia and a just, lasting and comprehensive peace in line with the founding UN Charter and reaffirming the UN’s support for Ukraine’s sovereignty, independence, unity and territorial integrity.
The amended US-drafted resolution won 93 votes in favor, while 73 states abstained and eight voted no, Reuters reports.
The US put forward its text on Friday, pitting it against Ukraine and European allies who spent the past month negotiating with their own resolution.
The General Assembly also adopted the resolution drafted by Ukraine and European countries on Monday with 93 votes in favor, 65 abstentions and 18 no votes.
Here is a table showing how different countries voted.
Adoption of today’s UNGA resolution on an early & just peace in Ukraine confirms the importance of upholding the UN Charter & respecting all countries’ territorial integrity & sovereignty.
Peace in Ukraine. In line with the Charter.
✅ 93 votes in favor
❌ 18 votes against pic.twitter.com/JYp7d5K0Sv— 🇪🇺EU at UN-NY (@EUatUN) February 24, 2025
UPDATE: Chris Law said:
Will the foreign secretary condemn what’s happened just now in the United Nations, with the United States joining Russia in not standing up for the resolution condemning Russian aggression in Ukraine?
And Lammy said:
We are proud to have co-sponsored the general assembly resolution proposed by Ukraine in support of a just and lasting peace in Ukraine in-line with the UN Charter.
Alec Shelbrooke (Con) says within the last few minutes the US has voted against a UN resolution condemning Russia. He says he understands why the PM and the foreign secretary have to adopt a certain approach with President Trump in Washington. But he urges them to point out that, just as Europe is reliant on US military power in Europe, European military assets often help the US in the Indo-Pacific.
Melanie Ward (Lab) said that, with Reform UK MPs not in the chamber for the statement, she was sure all MPs present would agree that it is President Putin who is the dictator, not President Zelenskyy.
Lammy ducks invitation from Tory MP who asks if he regrets withdrawing his past criticism of Trump
Desmond Swayne (Con) asks if Lammy regrets recanting the original (very negative) views that he expressed about President Trump. And, if he does, will he follow the example of Archbiship Cranmer and plunge the offending hand into the flame?
Lammy says this is a serious debate. His comments were “old news”, he says. Moving forward will require diplomacy and friendship, he says. And he says the real threats come from autocracies.
‘Beyond repulsive’ – MPs condemn Trump for his comments about Putin and Zelenskyy
Julian Lewis, the Conservative former chair of the Commons defence committee and former chair of the intelligence and security committee, said he would resist the temptation to ask Lammy if he shared his “feeling of disgust at the spectacle of the leader of the free world [President Trump] showering praise and admiration on the killer of Ukraine”.
And Stephen Flynn, the SNP leader in the Commons said that he would not ask Lammy to agree with him in the chamber that Trump’s remark about President Zelenskyy being a dictator was “beyond repulsive”. But he said he was sure Lammy did privately agree with him.
Andrew Mitchell, a former Tory deputy foreign secretary, says there should be no dispute on the facts of the matter; a P5 country (Russia – one of the five permanent members of the UN security council) has invaded its neigbour “in an act we thought had gone out with the last century, has bombed and destroyed its infrastructure and has butchered and murdered its citizens”.
This is another example of an MP rebuking and refutting President Trump – without naming him explicity. Mitchell was referring to Trump claiming Ukraine started the war.
Lammy agrees with Mitchell, saying Russia was in breach of the UN charter.
Paul Waugh (Lab) asks if Lammy agrees with him the President Zelenskyy is a democrat, not a dictator.
Lammy says he has met Zelenskyy six or seven times. He goes on:
He has always struck me as the most courageous and brave of individuals, leading his people to self determination. And that is something that I think we recognise right across the United Kingdom.
That is Lammy making it clear that he disagrees with President Trump about Zelenskyy being a dictator – without accepting Waugh’s invitation to say that explicitly.
James Cleverly, the former Tory foreign secretary, says he agrees defence spending needs to rise now.
He says Britain said things that encourages the Ukrainians to fight. So the government should honour the commitments it made to Ukraine, he says.