The Chronicle

Uni postcode lottery

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A SCHOOL leaver’s chances of going to university depend heavily on where they live, new figures suggest.

London teenagers are around 25% more likely to go into higher education than their peers across England, according to the Ucas data, while the region with the lowest proportion was the South West at 28.9%. On average, a third (33.3%) of 18-year-olds in England went on to study for a degree this autumn. BRITAIN should “stay aligned” to the European Union after Brexit and there may have to be payments and easy movement of people in order to retain the benefits of the single market and the customs union, the shadow Brexit secretary has said.

Sir Keir Starmer signalled his support for a ‘soft’ Brexit, stating: “We do have a choice, do we want to stay aligned so that we can trade successful­ly or do we want to tear apart and I say we should stay aligned.”

Labour, he insisted, had been “very clear” that the party wanted a partnershi­p that “retains the benefits of the single market and the customs union” and wanted a new treaty.

Speaking on BBC One’s The Andrew Marr Show yesterday, Sir Keir said: “We would start with viable options, staying in a customs union and a single market variant which means full participat­ion in the single market,” adding that it was the only way to achieve no hard border in Northern Ireland.

He went on: “You can’t sweep the customs union and the single market off the table on the one hand and also say you don’t want a hard border in Northern Ireland – you can’t have no hard border if you don’t have alignment.”

Asked if Theresa May’s deal struck with the EU this week would mean Britain would in perpetuity stay very, very close to the single market and the customs union, he responded: “Yes, and I think that’s the right thing and I think we should hold her to that because that goes to the heart of the question what sort of Britain do we want to be?

“Do we see Europe as our major trading partner in the future, or do we want to rip ourselves apart from that?”

Asked if Britain would have to carry on paying some money in, he said: “Norway pays money in, they do it actually on a voluntary basis – there may have to be payments, that’s to be negotiated.”

On freedom of movement, he said: “Well, that would have to be negotiated, but the end of free movement doesn’t mean no movement. Of course, we would want people to come from the EU to work here, we would want people who are here to go and work in the EU, the basis of that would have to be negotiated.”

Speaking about regulation­s and standards, Sir Keir added that if the UK wanted the benefits of the single market and the customs union “you’ve got to stay on the same level playing field”.

He said: “We are very comfortabl­e with staying on a level playing field.”

Asked if Labour would call for a second referendum, he replied: “We haven’t called for a second referendum – things are moving so fast it’s hard to know what’s going to come next, but we are not calling for it.”

Shadow foreign secretary Emily Thornberry stressed the need for managed migration, telling BBC One’s Sunday Politics: “It would be economical­ly ridiculous for us to march off into the middle of the Atlantic and say we turn our backs on the EU.”

 ??  ?? MOLLIE King has thanked her dance partner AJ Pritchard for getting her to the semi-final as she became the 11th celebrity to be eliminated from Strictly Come Dancing last night.
The Saturdays star, left, added that Pritchard was the “best teacher ever”.
MOLLIE King has thanked her dance partner AJ Pritchard for getting her to the semi-final as she became the 11th celebrity to be eliminated from Strictly Come Dancing last night. The Saturdays star, left, added that Pritchard was the “best teacher ever”.

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