• 6 months ago
Labour's leader Keir Starmer has ruled out any radical re-haul of the UK-EU relationships but has made clear his distaste for Boris Johnson's post-Brexit arrangements.
Transcript
00:00As the UK prepares to hold a general election, the leading Conservative Party looks ready
00:05to lose to the opposition Labour Party for the first time in 14 years.
00:11A Labour victory would definitely be a step up for UK-EU relations. The EU will know that
00:18the Labour Party was fighting for the UK's continued membership of the EU. They know
00:25that. And they also know that the Labour Party doesn't have the same bizarre hostilities
00:32to the EU that the previous few governments have had.
00:39Despite calling for a re-referendum in 2019, Starmer has publicly hardened his approach
00:45and ruled out any return to the single market or customs union.
00:48I think the reason, yeah, is that they don't want to name things which could be lightning
00:54rods for criticism from the Conservatives or from certain elements of the more Brexit-supporting
00:59press in the UK. So I think they probably do have more ideas up their sleeve, but I'm
01:05not sure the party necessarily has decided exactly which ones it itself wants to go for
01:10in power. I think it will depend to some degree on the size of any majority it has. If the
01:16majority is smaller than expected, only 20 or 30 seats maybe, they'll be less willing
01:21to take political risks.
01:23When it comes to NATO, the Labour Party are as committed to the pact as their Tory predecessors.
01:29They have promoted a security pact between the UK and the EU, although the details on
01:33this remain vague. Experts have said that a Labour victory will largely mean that the
01:37new party will attempt to come to negotiations with a clean slate and make themselves more
01:42present in negotiations with the EU.
01:45I think Labour are really going to focus on demonstrating their presence in Europe and
01:50they are a different type of operation to the Conservatives. If you look at their rhetoric,
01:54there's a lot focused on meetings and presence and public engagement. That's really what
01:58this security pact is actually all about.
02:01If the Labour government make it into power, they could be set to negotiate a tricky renewed
02:06role for the UK in the European Union, having to appeal to both Brussels' requirements and
02:12large portions of its electorate who voted for Britain to leave the EU to start with.

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