Starmer’s new Brexit betrayal as UK set to ‘align’ with EU food rules | Politics | News

Sir Keir Starmer is accused of Stuck for another “Brexit betrayal” for explaining a new agreement plan with Brussels. Cabinet Office Minister Nick Thomas-Symonds will say that the government is compatible with the EU rules to obtain a permanent agreement on food and beverage agreed within the next 18 months.
Negotiations will begin later this year, but in the meantime, the UK will stop boundary controls in fruit and vegetables, including tomatoes, grapes and pepper that will enter into force this summer. The government also canceled border controls on live animals from the EU and animal and plant goods from Ireland.
Mr. Thomas-Symonds will promise that the Labor Government will “make decisions based on national interests, to put in hard gardens, to rely on empty slogans”.
With the EU, adaptation to standards will increase growth and reduce food prices. It will say that this is “sovereignty, applied in national interests”.
However, Shadow Foreign Secretary Dame Priti Patel said: “The worker is once again trying to justify EU surrender – but the British people will not receive this betrayal.
“Keir Starmer dragged us back to Brussels’ arms and sold this country into a rule instead of a rule producer and sold our fishing communities in this process.
“Conservatives will never stop and will not allow the Labor Party to take back the democratic will of this country. We will fight them at every step.”
Mr. Thomas-Symonds will also use a speech to start an attack on reform and leader Nigel Farage. “In the next election, Nigel Farage’s manifesto will say that he wants to take Britain backwards and that he wants to reduce at least £ 9 billion from the economy and will bring a risk for business and bring the risk of increasing food prices.
“Farage wants England to fail. The policy model feeds it, offers easy answers, divides communities and stops anger.”
The Labor Party says that an existing agreement, which he hopes to confirm and secure a long -term confirmation and assurance, reduces costs for supermarkets and shoppers.
If Mr. Farage had reversed the agreement, exports would be more difficult for the farming and fishing industry.
A reform British spokesman said, “This workers’ government did not harm any more than the government.
“Since his start of his duty, the worker has been drowning 157,000 fewer people on the payroll, and he has been drowning success and hitting small and medium -sized enterprises throughout the country.
“Relaxing to the EU and leaving us involved in the EU laws, which is kept in the EU laws that Kemi Badenoch cannot scrape, will not revive the struggling economy of England.”



