Brexit does not mean the UK is turning away from the world, Theresa May to tell United Nations today
Prime Minister will use first General Assembly address to say 'bold action' required to meet the challenges facing the world
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BREXIT does not mean the UK is turning away from the world, Theresa May will tell the United Nations today.
But the Prime Minister will acknowledge the political class around the world needs to do more to listen to the public's concerns.
In her first address to the UN General Assembly, Mrs May will say "bold action" and international co-operation is required to meet the challenges facing the world.
She will use her appearance at the gathering of world leaders in New York to say that only the UN can cope with issues including terrorism, mass migration and modern slavery.
It comes amid heightened security after bombs went off in New York and New Jersey over the weekend. A suspect remains in police custody.
Mrs May will say when the British people voted to leave the European Union "they did not vote to turn inwards or walk away from any of our partners in the world".
But the PM, who used the G20 summit earlier this month to acknowledge the need to address the anti-globalisation movement's concerns, will return to her theme about a change in the way politics works.
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She will say people want "a politics that is more in touch with their concerns; and bold action to address them" and that "the biggest threats to our prosperity and security do not recognise or respect international borders".
Adding that "if we only focus on what we do at home, the job is barely half done".
The Prime Minister will remind leaders that they are at the UN "as servants to the men and women that we represent back at home".
She will add: "And as we do so, we must recognise that for too many of those men and women the increasing pace of globalisation has left them feeling left behind.
"The challenge for those of us in this room is to ensure our governments and our global institutions, such as this United Nations, remain responsive to the people that we serve. That we are capable of adapting our institutions to the demands of the 21st century."
She will say that the UN needs to forge a "bold new multilateralism" to address the "big security and human rights challenges of our time".
And the PM will call for cross-border action to tackle criminal gangs "trafficking our fellow citizens into lives of slavery and servitude".
But the challenge facing Mrs May as the UK prepares to leave the EU will be underlined in a meeting with Japanese counterpart Shinzo Abe later.
Earlier this month, the Japanese government produced a 15-page dossier listing the country's concerns over the impact Brexit could have on its firms with bases in the UK.
Mrs May will also hold a series of face-to-face meetings with other leaders and take part in a summit on refugees called by US president Barack Obama.