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EU talks going ‘to the wire’ as Starmer prepares to announce deal

18 May 2025 3 minute read
Prime Minister Keir Starmer and European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen speak to the press at the European Commission headquarters. Photo Benjamin Cremel/PA Wire

Talks on a UK-EU deal are in their “final hours” ahead of a major summit with the bloc, the minister in charge of negotiations has said.

Sir Keir Starmer is expected to announce a deal with the EU when he meets European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and European Council President Antonio Costa in London on Monday.

The Prime Minister said the agreement would be “another step forwards” for the UK and “good for our jobs, good for our bills and good for our borders”.

But on Sunday Cabinet Office minister Nick Thomas-Symonds said the final details of the deal were still being worked out, with talks going “to the wire”.

Announcement

Monday’s summit has been expected to bring an announcement on British access to a 150 billion euro (£125 billion) EU defence fund, in what could be a boost for UK defence companies.

But reports suggest there could also be agreements on allowing British travellers to use e-gates at European airports, cutting red tape on food exports and imports, and setting up a youth mobility scheme with the EU.

Mr Thomas-Symonds would not give details of the prospective deal during broadcast interviews on Sunday, telling the BBC’s Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg: “Nothing is agreed until everything is agreed.”

But he said the Government had been pushing for British citizens to be able to use EU queues at airports once again, and he was “confident” that a deal on food could be reached.

He said: “We know we’ve had lorries waiting for 16 hours, fresh food in the back not able to be exported because frankly it’s just going off, red tape, all the certifications that are required, we absolutely want to reduce that.”

He also suggested the UK could be open to aligning with EU rules in some areas “to make sure we get far easier trade”, saying this was “a sovereign choice”, and he said any youth mobility scheme would have to be “smart and controlled”.

‘Surrender’

Both Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch and Reform UK leader Nigel Farage have already described the deal as a “surrender”, despite the details not yet being known, and indicated they would tear it up if they came to power.

Youth mobility could prove a major sticking point for the opposition, and Mrs Badenoch said she feared it would involve a return to free movement “by the back door”.

Shadow Cabinet Office minister Alex Burghart told Sky News’ Sunday Morning With Trevor Phillips there were “very limited circumstances” in which the Tories would support a scheme, saying it must not be “uncapped”.

Existing schemes with countries including Australia and Canada involve limited numbers and require a visa, but the details of any EU scheme remain to be seen.

But the Liberal Democrats have backed a “capped youth mobility scheme”, and the party’s Europe spokesman James MacCleary accused the Government of “dragging their heels when it comes to properly negotiating on the issue”.

The Lib Dems have also said that a youth mobility scheme could boost GDP by enough to fund a reversal of the cuts to the winter fuel payment.

But the economic expansion predicted by the Centre for European Reform as a result of a youth mobility scheme would take years to materialise.


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Jeff
Jeff
20 days ago

Even a good one will have the Clacton wanderer and Kemi the gaffless decrying it.

Fi yn unig
Fi yn unig
19 days ago

The same mouths that insisted we vote to impose economic sanctions on ourselves are insisting again that they stay in place. Their whole idea of quitting the EU was to be able to strike trade deals with other countries around the world. Whatever the details are (and we’ll have to wait and see), at least on paper, deals have just been done with India and the U.S. and now, without joining the EU, we could be looking at another deal done that may improve matters but still they carp. The Tories’ contribution was to join another trading bloc with rules… Read more »

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