Andrew Tettenborn

The EU can detect weakness in its dealings with Keir Starmer

Keir Starmer (Credit: Getty images)

Labour’s election promise to respect Brexit and at the same time reset our relations with the EU was easy to make. Keir Starmer must have realised that riding both these horses at the same time might be troublesome, but with an election to win he doubtless hoped for the best. 

If so, he has been quickly disabused. Following tentative approaches to Brussels, it is clear that the Prime Minister faces a bleak choice: either come back with not much to show, or agree to a return of Euro-control over large swathes of UK life which the electorate will see for precisely for what it is; in name, if not in substance: the abandonment of much of Brexit. 

Starmer has two choices: stall, or give in

The difficulty is that each side wants what the other is highly unlikely to give. The PM is desperate to woo UK business by easing bureaucracy on imports and exports, particularly of food and plants.

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