Manchester Evening News

Corbyn seeks EU customs union deal

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JEREMY Corbyn has set up a high-stakes showdown with Theresa May by backing a “new and comprehens­ive” UK-EU customs union to ensure tariff-free trade after Brexit.

The Labour leader’s announceme­nt opens up a clear divide with the Prime Minister, who wants to be outside any customs union so Britain can sign free trade deals with countries around the world after leaving the EU.

Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson described Mr Corbyn’s position as a “betrayal” of the Brexit vote and a “cynical” and “deluded” attempt to link up with Tory rebels to inflict a damaging defeat on the PM in an upcoming expected vote on a cross-party amendment calling for a customs union.

But Mr Corbyn said his call was “consistent” with Labour’s position since the referendum, and an “appeal to MPs of all parties” to “put the people’s interests before ideologica­l fantasies” to protect jobs, living standards and the economy and avoid a hard Irish border.

To back his argument, Mr Corbyn used the example of Mini cars, which during manufactur­ing cross the Channel three times without any tariffs or border checks before the finished vehicle rolls off the production line.

Setting out Labour’s policy at a speech in Coventry, Mr Corbyn said: “Every country, whether it’s Turkey, Switzerlan­d, or Norway that is geographic­ally close to the EU, without being an EU member state has some sort of close relationsh­ip to the EU. Some more advantageo­us than others.

“And Britain will need a bespoke, negotiated relationsh­ip of its own.”

He added: “We have long argued that a customs union is a viable option for the final deal so Labour would seek to negotiate a new, comprehens­ive UK-EU customs union to ensure there are no tariffs with Europe and to help avoid any need whatsoever for a hard border in Northern Ireland.”

While Mr Johnson said the plan would leave Britain as a “colony” of the EU, Mr Corbyn insisted he would not countenanc­e a deal that leaves Britain as a “passive recipient of rules decided elsewhere by others”.

“We do not believe that deals with the US or China, would be likely to compensate for a significan­t loss of trade with our trading neighbours in the EU, and the Government’s own leaked assessment­s show that,” Mr Corbyn said.

On immigratio­n, the Labour leader said free movement would end as a “statement of fact” after Brexit and committed to the “reasonable management of migration”.

He said: “Every industry needs workers. There is a skills shortage in Britain and our National Health Service is already suffering because large numbers of EU staff have gone home because they are frightened of the future in Britain.

“We want to turn that around. They are welcome to stay, welcome to work here and we need their skills and we need their dedication to public service.”

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Jeremy Corbyn

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