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‘We need to think much bigger’: trade minister calls for greater ambition in UK-EU reset

about 11 hours ago
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It was all smiles and warm handshakes when the two men in charge of renegotiating the UK’s relationship with the EU met in Brussels this week,Maroš Šefčovič and the UK minister for EU relations, Nick Thomas-Symonds, sharing a stage on the third floor of the vast European parliament building, were at pains to show the cross-Channel relationship was in a good place after years of rancour,The deep frustration about the lack of progress in the “resetting” of the relationship between the UK and the EU was evident on stage and behind the scenes,Šefčovič, the European commissioner for trade, told MPs and MEPs gathered at the EU-UK parliamentary partnership assembly (PPA) of the need for a reboot but also hinted at the need for more ambition in the next round of talks, reminding the British in the room that an over-arching Swiss-style deal, as offered to the former prime minister Boris Johnson, was still very much on the table,The following day, the trade minister, Chris Bryant, on a charm offensive in Paris, expressed his own frustration at the “piecemeal” approach he inherited when he was appointed in September.

Bryant insisted both sides needed to be more ambitious.“I think we need to lift our eyes to the distant horizon and think in a much bigger, more ambitious way about what is possible,” he said, highlighting the need for sectoral regulatory alignment, which could reboot exports for both sides in everything from medical devices to chemicals.“This is the line that I’ve been telling everybody in the department since I got into post – the [relationship] with the EU is not a series of policy decisions, it is one great big decision, which is about how much do you want to align.And how do we achieve that?”It was a line echoed by the UK chancellor, Rachel Reeves, later that day in London when she spoke of the “strategic imperative for deeper integration between the UK and the EU”.And, in the political equivalent of three buses coming at once, a third Labour figure, the London mayor, Sadiq Khan, on Wednesday called on his party to go into the next general election promising to rejoin the EU.

Meanwhile, reset talks are in danger of stalling on the baby steps of last year’s common understanding, when the EU and UK agreed to forge a deal on youth mobility, agriculture trade, energy and defence.The EU’s insistence that EU citizens get home fees if they attend university in the UK has brought talks on youth mobility to a deadlock.“There is a strong political will for a deal from the EU member states, but this issue has become very thorny,” said one person briefed on the talks.Another added: “We are still talking regularly but progress has slowed a lot because of this issue.”A sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) deal will make a difference, but talks have been painfully slow.

Bryant spoke to MEPs in Brussels on Tuesday and then again to French businesses on Wednesday in the sumptuous ballroom at the British residence in Paris.He noted the UK was slow, but the EU was sometimes even slower – although both sides agreed to open talks on SPS last May, the European Commission didn’t get the mandate from member states until November.“If we can get from one in 10 British businesses exporting, to two in 10 or three in 10, like the French or the Germans, it would radically transform our economic opportunities in the UK.That’s precisely the job I’m fixated on from the beginning,” he said.But Bryant is pushing for a more defined approach to achieve that.

“Rather than this piecemeal, oh let’s do [a deal on] SPS, let’s do tuition fees, let’s do [the student exchange programme] Erasmus.And then it takes forever, it gets bogged down and nobody remembers what we’ve done,” he said.“We are doing all these bits and pieces, policy by policy … we need to be much more focused.”Bryant is one of many pushing for mutual recognition of professional qualifications, and a compromise for touring artists, among other issues such as conformity in sectors where public health is at stake.There is also AI regulation, and tuition fees for British students whose parents moved to the EU before Brexit – a deal on home fees runs out in 2028.

One solution is a wider integration with the EU, as Reeves mentioned.In Brussels, Šefčovič said a Swiss-style overarching deal was still on the table in the long term.Instead of a patchwork of more than 100 bilateral treaties, Switzerland entered a series of agreements on 2 March covering health, food, space and electricity, in addition to the privileged access it already has to the single market.“Switzerland, of course, it’s possible, but it takes time,” Šefčovič told MPs and MEPs at the PPA.The advantage of an overarching deal was that it offered a “dynamic alignment approach” in regulation so deals could be “faster” and “earlier”, he said.

Asked in Paris if this was something the UK would consider, Bryant said he suspected “that any model that works for one country won’t necessarily work for another”, adding that he was “in favour of one overarching something” with the EU.Bryant also said he wanted to see a shared defence procurement strategy.“We need to take that seriously; we’ve done really well on cooperation, on sanctions in relation to the Russian shadow fleet, but we still haven’t got to the point where we will need to go to: defence procurement across the whole of the EU.”The immediate pressure on the UK and the EU is to get youth mobility, SPS and other items in the common understanding agreed by July when the second post-Brexit EU-UK summit is scheduled.But the question that faces Labour now is how far it will go after that?There is mounting pressure on the prime minister, Keir Starmer, from his MPs to go even wider than defence and trade.

In a new pamphlet for the Fabians, several Labour figures called for the prime minister to push for further integration with the EU.They included the London MP Stella Creasy, who threw her weight behind the Swiss model, and the Labour chair of the business select committee, Liam Byrne, who called for cooperation on a range of topics including critical minerals and energy.The next reset agenda may also include talks on a customs union – something several members of Starmer’s cabinet would like to see.Starmer has so far ruled this out, as it would void trade agreements he has signed with the US and India.EU sources, however, say they are open to agreeing a deal on sufficiently favourable terms to compensate the UK for any trade lost as a result.

Post-Brexit trade relations are not easy, as this first year of reset has shown.But the key was to look up, said Bryant.“I sometimes worry we have got ourselves into a funk, ‘oh it’s all difficult; how are we going to survive’,” he said, quoting the Belgian rapper Stromae’s Mauvaise Journée, about someone who insists on their right to be depressed in the comfort of their own sofa.“I think we’re a bit like the tightrope walker, we’re a bit obsessed with walking foot by foot [instead of focusing on the end of the rope].And that doesn’t work.

That’s when you fall off,”
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House of Lords has ‘signed its own death warrant’ by stalling assisted dying bill, says MP

The House of Lords “signed its own death warrant” over its stalling of the UK assisted dying bill, the MP Kim Leadbeater said as she joined more than a dozen terminally ill and bereaved people in protest outside parliament.Marking the second anniversary of the death at Dignitas of the prominent assisted dying campaigner Paola Marra, Leadbeater, whose private member’s bill for England and Wales looks set to run out of time, said many MPs, who had already voted by a majority to pass the bill, were “angry and upset” by the addition of about 1,200 amendments in the Lords, which will probably result in the bill falling without a vote.The protest, organised by the campaign group Dignity in Dying, came as the number of UK residents who had an assisted death at Dignitas rose to its second-highest level in two decades. Forty-three people travelled to Switzerland in 2025, up from 37 the previous year, and second only to 47 people in 2016, figures show.Leadbeater said of the teminally ill adults (end of life) bill: “MPs took this decision having entered into this debate in a really serious, considered manner

about 13 hours ago
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Kent meningitis outbreak may have peaked as UKHSA reports slowdown in cases

The Kent meningitis outbreak may have reached its peak after only two new cases were reported by officials on Friday.The UK Health and Security Agency said that as of 12.30pm on Thursday, there were 18 confirmed and 11 probable cases of meningitis linked to the Kent outbreak, taking the total number of people with the disease to 29. Of the confirmed cases, 13 were meningitis B.While the growth in cases may have slowed, the situation remains serious, with all cases requiring hospital admission

about 13 hours ago
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The Kent meningitis outbreak: what is happening and why?

The deadly outbreak of meningitis in Kent has fuelled concerns about how far the disease will spread and seen the return of people wearing masks and queueing for vaccines. The scenes are reminiscent of the Covid crisis, but meningitis is very different. Here we look at how the outbreak has unfolded.Meningitis is a potentially lethal but uncommon disease caused by viruses and bacteria that trigger inflammation of the meninges, the protective linings that cover the brain. The Kent outbreak is driven by meningococcal bacteria which are found in the nose and throat of about 10% of the population

about 14 hours ago
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Tessa Richards obituary

My friend Tessa Richards, who has died of cancer aged 75, was a doctor and medical editor who campaigned indomitably for patients to be partners equal with doctors in healthcare. In addition, she transformed the relationship that the BMJ (formerly the British Medical Journal), where she worked for 40 years, had with patients.When Tessa graduated in medicine from Guy’s hospital medical school in London in 1973, doctors dominated patients, and did what they thought best for them. There was no culture of patients being equal partners, and doctors discussing options with them. As Tessa wrote in 1990: “Even the briefest spell on the other side of the desk or in a hospital bed gives blinding insight into patients’ vulnerability and of their need to be listened to, treated with respect, and given full, unhurried, jargon-free explanations

about 14 hours ago
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George Nicholson obituary

Borough Market in London is today a thriving market and popular place to eat – George Nicholson, who has died aged 79, was chair of its board of trustees for 10 years until 2006, and, as such, contributed much to that success. He loved the place; he and I ate there together, as friends, on his last birthday.George was proud of being a Londoner and his sense of civic pride and commitment to London continued all his life. In 1981 he was elected as the Labour member for Bermondsey of the Greater London council. He became chair of the GLC planning committee, advocating for Thames beaches, social housing, the best of urbanism and celebration of the possible

about 15 hours ago
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Tens of thousands of prisoners in England and Wales at risk of cell fires

The government has reneged on a pledge to make all prison cells fire-safe or take them out of use by the end of next year, meaning tens of thousands of prisoners in England and Wales will remain at risk.The Ministry of Justice has admitted it has known for almost two decades that about a quarter of prison places are unsafe, putting the people housed in affected cells at risk.Successive governments had pledged to remedy the situation by the end of 2027, but that commitment has now been dropped and the government has not set a new date.Earlier this week, the Guardian reported on the inquest of Clare Dupree, a woman with severe mental illness who died in a fire in her cell at HMP Eastwood.The inquest jury found there had been “missed opportunities” to prevent Dupree’s death, and that a “lack of automatic in-cell fire detection caused a delay in detecting the fire”

1 day ago
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UK borrowing costs hit highest since 2008 as markets expect up to three interest rate rises

about 10 hours ago
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‘Huge build-up of risk’: London’s centuries-old shipping industry wrestles with Iran war

about 13 hours ago
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JP Morgan Chase to use computer estimates to monitor hours worked by junior bankers

about 16 hours ago
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Marmite maker Unilever in talks to merge food business with US-based McCormick

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Work from home and slow down on the road: world’s energy watchdog advises emergency measures as oil prices rise

about 20 hours ago
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High charges, poor service: NCP hits the skids as drivers change habits

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