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UK’s former Brexit negotiator says Burnham should ditch much of Starmer’s EU reset if made PM – Europe live | Europe

Former Brexit negotiator likely urges new UK PM to abandon reset in relations

Lisa O’Carroll

Meanwhile, old Brexit negotiationKeir Starmer must abandon much of his reset with the EU if Andy Burnham becomes prime minister, David Frost has said.

Britain's chief Brexit negotiator David Frost speaks to the press in 2021
Britain’s chief Brexit negotiator David Frost speaks to the press in 2021 Photo: John Thys/AFP/Getty Images

especially should cancel plans, including food and beverage deal It was designed to reduce red tape for British exporters to the EU.

Keir Starmer and his team speaking at the Changing Europe conference in the UK Did not think through “reset” procedures properly and it was a mistake to pursue agreements that would force the UK to be prescriptive rather than prescriptive.

“I don’t think those advocating a reset thought it was properly thought through,” he said of the outgoing UK leadership. “They didn’t think enough about the choices and processes,he said.

“I think my advice to Andy Burnham would be: if you need to continue the reset…then don’t succumb to the new laws“Do not go ahead with SPS, ETS, electricity,” he said, referring to the Sanitary and Phytosanitary or food and beverage agreement, the Emissions Trading System (alignment on charging carbon emissions involved in production).

These are “elements involving EU law”, he said, adding that “if Burnham has to go on with Erasmus and other things” on the cultural side, including youth mobility, “try to convince us that our resources are being used well”.

His These remarks came a day after the EU postponed a summit with the UK government planned for July 22 Agree on SPS, ETS and youth mobility.

Talks on youth mobility were until recently deadlocked by Britain’s refusal to accept the EU’s demand that EU citizens should be able to study at UK universities on the basis of home tuition fees.

Frost said he was “skeptical that this is the right time” to strike a youth mobility deal and “give Europeans concessions that we don’t give to others”, such as tuition fees.

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Three-fifths of Gen Z Britons want new vote to rejoin EU, poll finds

Jamie Grierson

Jamie Grierson

A generation of young Britons who were left out of the 2016 EU referendum because of their age now believe Brexit has failed, with a majority demanding a new vote to rejoin the EU, private polls show.

Protesters marching through central London during the National Rejoining March called on the UK government to rejoin the European Union on the tenth anniversary of the Brexit referendum. Photo: Vuk Valcic/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock

The show of Generation Z Brits Deep dissatisfaction with Britain’s departure from the EU, That’s according to a new survey of young people aged 18 to 28, conducted by think tank More in Common and shared with the Guardian.

The data reveal that 60% of this group would vote to rejoin the bloc if given the opportunity. compared to the 9% who would vote to stay out.

Survey shows Gen Z Britons view Brexit as a failure and support rejoining the EU

When the results are filtered to focus only on those most likely to vote in a hypothetical second referendum, the gap becomes a very large one, with the pro-EU Remain/Rejoin camp receiving 81% of the vote, while the margin for stay out received only 19%.

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