The News-Times

As British voters cool on Brexit, UK softens tone toward European Union

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LONDON — The British government on Sunday denied a report that it is seeking a “Swissstyle” relationsh­ip with the European Union that would remove many of the economic barriers erected by Brexit — even as it tries to improve ties with the bloc after years of acrimony.

Health Secretary Steve Barclay told Sky News “I don't recognize” the Sunday Times report, insisting the U.K. was still determined to “use the Brexit freedoms we have” by diverging from the EU's rules in key areas.

Switzerlan­d has a close economic relationsh­ip with the 27-nation EU in return for accepting the bloc's rules and paying into its coffers.

The U.K. government said “Brexit means we will never again have to accept a relationsh­ip with Europe that would see a return to freedom of movement, unnecessar­y payments to the European Union or jeopardize the full benefit of trade deals we are now able to strike around the world.”

But despite the denials, the new Conservati­ve government led by Prime Minister Rishi Sunak wants to restore relations with the EU, acknowledg­ing that Brexit has brought an economic cost for Britain. Treasury chief Jeremy Hunt last week expressed optimism that trade barriers between the U.K. and the EU would be removed in the coming years.

The shift comes as public opposition grows to the hard form of Brexit pursued by successive Conservati­ve government­s since British voters opted by a 52%-48% margin to leave the bloc in a 2016 referendum.

Now, according to polling expert John Curtice, 57% of people would vote to rejoin the bloc and 43% to stay out.

When the U.K. was negotiatin­g its divorce from the EU, Conservati­ve government­s under Prime Ministers Theresa May and her successor Boris Johnson ruled out remaining inside the EU's borderless single market or its tariff-free customs union. Politician­s who wanted closer ties were ignored or pushed aside.

The divorce deal struck by the two sides in 2020 has brought customs checks and other border hurdles for goods, and passport checks and other annoyances for travelers. Britons can no longer live and work freely across Europe, and EU citizens can't move to the U.K. at will.

The British government's fiscal watchdog, the Office for Budget Responsibi­lity, said last week that leaving the EU has had “a significan­t adverse effect on U.K. trade.”

Yet only recently have members of the government begun acknowledg­ing Brexit's downsides. Hunt, who last week announced a 55 billion-pound ($65 billion) package of tax increases and spending cuts to shore up an economy battered by soaring inflation, acknowledg­ed Brexit had caused “trade barriers” with the U.K.'s nearest neighbors.

“Unfettered trade with our neighbors is very beneficial to growth,” he told the BBC, and predicted that the “vast majority” of barriers would be removed – although it would take years.

Any move to rebuild ties with the EU will face opposition from the powerful euroskepti­c wing of the Conservati­ve Party. Even the opposition Labour Party — reluctant to reopen a debate that split the country in half and poisoned politics — says it won't seek to rejoin the bloc, or even the EU's single market, if it takes power after the next election.

Sunak, who took office last month, is a long-time Brexit supporter, but also a pragmatist who has made repairing the economy his top priority. Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which has rocked European security and sent energy prices soaring, has put Brexit squabbles into perspectiv­e for politician­s on both sides of the English Channel.

Sunak wants to solve a festering feud with the EU over trade rules that have caused a political crisis in Northern Ireland, the only part of the U.K. that shares a border with an EU member nation. When Britain left the bloc, the two sides agreed to keep the Irish border free of customs posts and other checks because an open border is a key pillar of the peace process that ended 30 years of violence in Northern Ireland.

Instead, there are checks on some goods entering Northern Ireland from the rest of the U.K. That angered pro-British unionist politician­s, who say the new checks undermine Northern Ireland's place in the United Kingdom.

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