Foreign Policy with Purpose
Strategic & Independent Diplomacy
Our foreign policy will be pragmatic, independent, and firmly rooted in the national interest. We believe that the UK must no longer act as the world's police force or fund ineffective international programs that fail to deliver value to the British taxpayer. Instead, we will pursue a targeted, strategic, and self-sufficient foreign and defence posture that supports our economy, protects our people, and promotes British values globally.
Shaping a New Global Role
We believe Britain should act as an independent middle power, focused on direct strategic interests rather than military interventionism. This includes reducing our foreign military footprint and limiting our involvement in costly overseas conflicts. We will maintain strong diplomatic and trade relations globally, particularly with key partners like the USA, Commonwealth nations, and emerging Asian economies.
Modern Defence for a Safer Britain
Our Armed Forces must be equipped for modern warfare. We will invest in cyber defence, intelligence services (MI5, MI6, GCHQ), drone capability, and AI-powered surveillance. At the same time, we will scale back unnecessary foreign deployments and redirect defence savings towards the NHS, housing, and infrastructure. The UK’s military budget will prioritise home-based defence, readiness, and personnel welfare over global adventurism.
Nuclear Readiness & Resilience
We support maintaining a continuous-at-sea nuclear deterrent for now, but we oppose a full-scale Trident renewal. We will explore cost-effective, next-generation deterrent technologies and open public debate on our long-term nuclear posture. Britain must be strong, but not wasteful.
Reforming Foreign Aid
Foreign aid must serve Britain’s interests. We will drastically reduce international aid budgets, retaining emergency-only funding for disaster relief and refugee support. All aid will be tied to UK strategic objectives and delivered via trusted partners. Some savings will be redirected to domestic priorities, including healthcare and social support for our citizens.
Reviewing Global Alliances
Britain will reduce or withdraw from international bodies that fail to represent our interests. This includes scaling back contributions to the UN, WHO, WTO, and ICC where effectiveness and alignment with UK goals are questionable. We will prioritise bilateral relationships over bloated multilateral frameworks.
A Post-Brexit Vision
The UK will no longer rely on the EU for global engagement. We will promote the ‘Global Britain’ brand by pursuing new trade deals, reviving Commonwealth relations, and investing in national manufacturing and strategic industries. We reject any re-entry into the EU or the single market.
Managing Global Threats
To protect national security, we will invest heavily in cyber defence and intelligence infrastructure. The UK must not engage in unnecessary wars, but rather strengthen home defences and neutral diplomacy. Relations with countries such as China will prioritise economic cooperation while avoiding ideological entanglements that harm our national interests.
Serving Britain at Home & Abroad
The primary mission of the UK Armed Forces will be the defence of British territory, sovereignty, and borders. Our defence policy will focus on deterrence, national resilience, and rapid homeland response. We will reduce overseas commitments, increase troop levels, and ensure modernisation of our Navy and RAF with the latest AI and tech-driven systems.