Business Day

Labour ‘backs customs union’

- Agency Staff London

Britain’s opposition Labour party will back a new customs union with the EU, its Brexit policy chief said — a move that would make commerce with the bloc easier but limit the country’s ability to get other trade deals.

Keir Starmer said on Sunday that his party had agreed that if it won power it should negotiate a new union with the bloc and that Conservati­ve Prime Minister Theresa May faced a potential rebellion against her position on the issue.

“Crunch time is now coming for the prime minister because the majority in parliament does not back her approach to a customs union and … will be heard sooner rather than later,” he said. Starmer’s comments, in a BBC television interview, came before a speech by Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn on Monday when he is expected to clarify the party’s Brexit stance.

The Conservati­ves are deeply divided over what sort of relationsh­ip should be built between the EU and the world’s sixth-largest economy after Britain leaves the bloc in 2019.

The adoption by Labour of a more decisive position of support for a customs union with the EU would intensify pressure on May’s party, which holds a minority of seats in parliament.

Such a shift could pave the way for Labour to vote alongside Conservati­ve MPs who are backing amendments to a trade bill that would keep Britain in the customs union.

Starmer hinted on Sunday his party might support those amendments, with the potential to hand the government a major defeat that would amount to a direct challenge to the prime minister. “We haven’t made a final decision on that. But they are so close to our amendments,” he said.

Trade minister Liam Fox urged Conservati­ve colleagues to keep an “open mind” and said their issue of concern might be addressed in a speech by the prime minister on Friday.

May hosted an eight-hour meeting of her Brexit war committee last week in an attempt to forge a common position. One source said she had accepted the argument of ministers who wanted to diverge more quickly from EU rules and regulation­s.

Starmer said Labour backed staying in a customs union to preserve trade in the UK’s biggest markets.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Trade: UK’s Labour Party Brexit policy chief Keir Starmer backs a new customs union with the EU.
/Reuters Trade: UK’s Labour Party Brexit policy chief Keir Starmer backs a new customs union with the EU.

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