New British Prime Minister Keir Starmer pledged this Tuesday to turn the page on Brexit and rebuild relations between EU member states and the United Kingdom. The Labor government leader’s statement comes on the heels of an official visit to Germany to meet German Chancellor Olaf Scholes.
“We must Get around Brexit And to mend the broken relationships left by the previous government. “This work started at the European Political Society meeting last month and I am determined to continue it, which is why I am going to Germany and France this week,” he promised.
Starmer understands that strengthening ties with these countries is “key not only to solving the global problem of illegal immigration, but also to boosting economic growth across the continent and, above all, in the UK”. The Prime Minister said the visits were part of a broader effort to restore ties with Europe and close a chapter of the large-scale rift caused by the country’s exit from the European Union.
This Wednesday, Starmer travels to France to meet Emmanuel Macron and attend the opening of the Paris Paralympic Games.
Highlighted by The GuardianThe attempt to renegotiate European relations is part of a broader strategy of political diversion that Starmer chose to define at the start of his prime ministership. Labor is already considering pushing ahead with “unpopular” measures, including a “stronger fiscal announcement”. Tax increase Coming in the October budget.
British PM warns of “unpopular” measures and “painful” next budget
Last week, the British press reported that British Finance Minister Rachel Reeves was considering raising capital gains tax. Inheritance tax Labor says it received £22bn (about €26bn) from the Conservatives to help plug a “hidden” deficit.
But the government is now warning it will have to go further than expected, as Finance Minister Rachel Reeves accused the Conservatives in July of “closing” a £22 billion budget hole (about 26 billion euros).
In a speech on Tuesday in the gardens of Downing Street, the headquarters of the British administration, Starmer promised to focus on wealth creation and national economic growth, and to do so he must take “tough measures”. Fix the British government after what he called “14 years of rot”.