Starmer travels to Brussels for talks to 'put Brexit years behind us'
- Sir Keir Starmer will travel to Brussels for talks with EU leaders to "put the Brexit years behind us" and enhance UK-EU relations.
- Starmer aims to establish a "broad-based security pact" and address trade barriers during discussions with leaders like Ursula von der Leyen.
- No concrete announcements are anticipated from the talks, which will also involve meetings with Charles Michel and Roberta Metsola.
28 Articles
28 Articles
Starmer Wants UK To Put “Brexit Years Behind Us” and Work “in Lockstep” With Brussels
Sir Keir Starmer is in Brussels today for his first bilateral meeting with European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen since he became prime minister in July. This official engagement is further evidence of the Labour government’s growing threat to British voters’ 2016 decision to leave the European Union. Long-time Remainer Starmer, who once fought for the Brexit referendum to be overturned, looks set to agree to a ‘youth mobility schem…
UK leader Starmer is on a 1-day visit to EU headquarters hoping to heal ties battered by Brexit - Seymour Tribune
BRUSSELS (AP) — British Prime Minister Keir Starmer traveled to Brussels on Wednesday on a mission to try to improve ties with the European Union, which disintegrated as the country left the world’s biggest trading bloc four years ago. Starmer wanted to focus his talks on security, migration and trade. He was due to hold […]
Starmer’s first shot at resetting ties with Brussels
UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer is meeting with EU executives in Brussels today for the first time since he won UK general elections last July. He promised to rekindle the relationship with Brussels after Brexit ground it down. However, so far, the prime minister has turned out to be a less collaborative partner than the EU might have expected.
Starmer Starts Long Road to Brexit Revamp With Brussels Trip
(Bloomberg) — Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s trip to Brussels on Wednesday will be his first real foray into forging a new post-Brexit relationship with Europe, a process expected to take months, if not years amid competing priorities.
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