Daily Express

We need leaders with vision for a better country

- SIR KEIR STARMER Leader of the Labour Party

BLINK and you might have missed the 13th anniversar­y of this Government last week.

There were no celebratio­ns. No list of achievemen­ts. Tory ministers barely mentioned it.

Looking around at the state of the country, you can see why they were so quiet.

An economy crashed by their kamikaze budget. Prices in the shops and interest rates sky rocketing.

The tax burden at its highest since the Second World War. An NHS face down on the floor. Crime out of control. Record high levels of immigratio­n.

Compoundin­g this failure is the Government’s total mismanagem­ent of Brexit.

It’s no great secret that I voted Remain. But as I went round the country, I found plenty to agree with Leave voters about. No matter how people voted, they wanted a better health service, better jobs, better wages, more security, a sense of control over their lives and their communitie­s.

In short: a chance to build a better Britain. If we are to make Brexit work, we need a government with the vision and the focus to deliver it.

As Rishi Sunak heads off to meet with Emmanuel Macron, there are no signs that he or his government have any proper plan to deliver that better future.

Express readers deserve their politician­s to be clear about where they stand. So let me spell it out simply.

Britain’s future is outside the EU. But the paper-thin Tory deal has stifled Britain’s potential and hugely weighted trade terms towards the EU.

That’s why – alongside vital discussion­s about Ukraine and Channel crossings – the subject of fixing the Trade and Cooperatio­n Agreement between the UK and the EU must be high up the agenda of the Prime Minister’s meeting tomorrow.

More than anything, British businesses and households need stability and certainty. They need us to use our sovereignt­y to benefit them, not as a tool to manage the Tory Party.

In recent weeks we’ve seen warnings from our car industry that their existence is at threat unless changes are made. Britain can lead in the manufactur­e and selling of electric cars.

But the Government’s failures mean they face the threat of damaging trade tariffs that will hold them back.

Our brilliant scientists and researcher­s face an uncertain future because they don’t know if they’ll be able to participat­e in the Horizon scheme that provides them crucial funding.

And the failure to do a proper deal over food has created onerous inspection­s, checks and paperwork at the border.

At last count, the failure of the Tories’ Brexit deal has left British households spending almost £7billion extra on food. In normal times this would be ridiculous: during a cost-of-living crisis, where prices have gone through the roof, it’s unforgivab­le.

We need to act now. New border controls coming in at the end of the year will further restrict trade, damaging businesses and households. There is a deal to be done that makes good on the British people’s desire to maintain our high food and animal welfare standards and prevent the burden of bureaucrat­ic red tape. It could save our importers hundreds of millions of pounds a year.

Whether it is working with European neighbours to tackle criminal gangs and stop dangerous boat crossings, or driving down the price of food, there is huge potential for change. That’s why we should be optimistic.

Every one of the problems I have outlined can be fixed from outside the EU. But it will require hard work, good relations and – above all – honesty.

Pretending everything is going fine, or ducking hard conversati­ons, will see Britain miss opportunit­ies and slip behind our competitor­s.

If we are to get this right, Rishi Sunak must face up to the truth – that the Tories have got this wrong. Failure to do the hard yards needed to right those wrongs will mean the Tories fail to deliver for Britain and fail to deliver on the promise of Brexit.

‘The Tories’ deal has left households spending £7bn extra on food’

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