Yorkshire Post

Starmer should drop ‘no rejoining’ rhetoric about the EU

- From: Richard Wilson, Chair, Leeds for Europe, Roundhay, Leeds.

IN A column making a lastminute pitch to voters ahead of the May 5 polls, Sir Keir Starmer highlights the cost of living crisis (‘The people of Yorkshire deserve better’, The Yorkshire Post, May 4).

These were local elections, so the Labour leader might be forgiven for failing to mention Brexit on this occasion. But it did mean ignoring Brexit’s huge contributi­on to the cost of living crisis.

Former Bank of England policymake­r Adam Posen estimates that “80 per cent” of the reasons the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund expects our inflation to remain high relative to other G7 countries are due to Brexit. “If you run a trade war against yourself, bad things happen,” says Mr Posen, head of Washington’s Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics.

But with May 5 behind us, we’re a step closer to the next General Election and deciding if Sir Keir will be our next Prime Minister – assuming the scandals-hit incumbent clings on. Sir Keir can’t continue to ignore Britain’s relationsh­ip with Europe and the enormous damage being done to us – directly and indirectly – by erecting needless and costly barriers to our closest allies and most important trading partners. We’re not party political, but Leeds for Europe was still happy to join other groups in the Grassroots for Europe network recently in signing a letter to Sir Keir calling on him to drop his “no rejoining” rhetoric (Starmer urged to ‘stop ducking’ case to rejoin EU, The Yorkshire Post, April 23). Our supporters represent a highly motivated, well-informed part of the electorate. Many who wouldn’t class themselves as natural Labour supporters might be willing to lend their votes to a party offering something better than this Tory Brexit catastroph­e and its meaningles­s slogans.

There are a lot of votes here. Would Sir Keir and colleagues such as Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer and Leeds West MP Rachel Reeves like to make a pitch for them?

From: JA King ,Thurgoland, Sheffield.

I THINK that if Peter Brown took a real look at the driving licence situation, he will find out that the same rules apply in the UK in that anyone from outside the UK can only drive on a foreign driving licence for six months.

Then they have to take a UK driving test – and thank goodness for that, as it will prove their driving competence on our country’s roads.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom