Keir Starmer speech on Labour’s approach to Brexit

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Keir
Starmer MP, Labour’s Shadow Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union,
setting out
Labour’s approach to Brexit, will say:

At
this election there will be a very clear choice on the ballot paper.

A
choice of two visions of Brexit.

Labour’s
approach to Brexit will be based on our values: internationalist. Outward
looking. A belief that we achieve more together than we do alone.

We
accept that outside the EU our relationship with Europe must change.

But
we do not accept that Brexit has to mean whatever Theresa May says it means. We
do not accept that there has to be a reckless Tory Brexit. We do not believe
that if you’re a citizen of the world, you’re a citizen of nowhere.

We
recognise that immigration rules will have to change as we exit the EU, but we
do not believe that immigration should be the overarching priority. We do not
believe that leaving the EU means severing our ties with Europe. We do not
believe that Brexit means weakening workers’ rights and environmental
protections or slashing corporate tax rates.

Labour
believe in a very different vision of how Brexit can work for Britain and the
EU.

We
believe in building a new relationship with the EU – not as members but as
partners. Where jobs, the economy and retaining the benefits of the Single
Market and the Customs Union are our priority. Where hard-fought workplace
rights and the environment are protected. Where we are an open, outward looking
country. Where EU nationals living here are guaranteed their rights and can
live in certainty that Brexit will not affect them.

A Brexit that brings the country together, radically devolves power and
supports all regions and nations of the UK.

That’s
the approach to Brexit I will set out today.

 A Labour Government would reset the Tories failing approach to Brexit.

We
will scrap the Government’s Brexit White Paper and replace it with fresh
negotiating priorities that reflect Labour values and our six tests.

Labour’s
White Paper will have a strong emphasis on retaining the benefits of the Single
Market and the Customs Union as we know that is vital to protecting jobs and
the economy.

Our White Paper will make clear that jobs
and the economy are Labour’s priority throughout – whereas the Conservatives
are willing to put this at risk.

That means we
will seek: continued tariff-free trade between the UK and the EU, no new
non-tariff burdens for business, regulatory alignment and continued
competitiveness for goods and services.

Whether this is
best achieved through reformed membership of the Single Market and the Customs
Union or via a bespoke trading arrangement is secondary to the outcome. What
matters for jobs, the economy and living standards is that we retain the
benefits of the Single Market and the Customs Union.

And rather than
focusing on hypothetical new trade deals with other countries, Labour will
focus above all else on securing strong trading arrangements with the EU. After
all, the EU accounts for 44 percent of our exports and is by far and away our
most important trading partner.

It is
extraordinary that we have a Prime Minister who has given up on the Single
Market and the Customs Union even before negotiations have begun, but is so
willing to talk up the chance of there being no deal reached.

Theresa May has
said that no deal is better than a bad deal. Boris Johnson has said no deal is
no problem. Labour are very clear that no deal is the worst possible deal.

It would cause huge damage to British businesses and trade, including
likely tariffs of 30-40
percent on dairy and meat producers, 10 percent tariffs on cars and a loss of
passporting rights for financial services. No wonder the CBI have called it a
‘recipe for chaos’.

A Labour approach
to Brexit means ending this reckless approach.

It means making
clear to our EU partners that we will seek to negotiate
strong transitional arrangements as we leave the EU and to ensure there is no
cliff-edge for the UK economy.

It means rejecting no deal as a viable option – a move that will give
greater certainty for investors, workers and businesses.

We
will also approach negotiations in a completely different way to the Tories.

Where
Theresa May wants to shut down scrutiny and challenge, Labour will welcome it.
We will work with Parliament, not against it.

Because
on an issue of this importance the Government can’t hide from the public or
Parliament.

A
Labour approach to Brexit means legislating to guarantee that Parliament has a
truly meaningful vote on the final Brexit deal.

It
means regular reporting back to Parliament on progress in negotiations and it
means working with the devolved administrations to reflect specific and
particular concerns.

A
Labour approach also means rebuilding relations with our EU partners, because
striking a good deal for Britain relies on having alliances across Europe.

We
will make clear that we will seek to build a close, collaborative future
relationship with the EU.

Not
as members, but as partners.

This will involve continued cooperation in a whole range of areas from
counter-terrorism to higher education; culture to climate change.

So a Labour
Government will seek to remain part of the Erasmus scheme so that British
students have the same cultural and educational opportunities after we leave
the EU.

We will ensure
the UK maintains our leading research role by staying part of Horizon 2020 and
its successor programmes, and by welcoming research staff from the EU.

We will seek to
maintain membership of or equivalent relations with European organisations
which offer benefits to the UK, such as Euratom, the European Medicines Agency,
Europol and Eurojust – two agencies I worked closely with as DPP.

A Labour approach
to Brexit means rejecting Theresa May’s argument that as we leave the EU, we
must also sever links that have served the EU and the UK well for decades.

A Labour
Government will also mean a new approach to how we treat EU nationals in the
UK.

It is shameful that the Prime Minister rejected
repeated attempts by Labour to resolve this before Article 50 was triggered. As
a result, 3 million EU nationals have suffered unnecessary uncertainty, as well
as the 1.2 million UK citizens living in the EU.

EU nationals do not just contribute to our society:
they are our society. And they should not be used as bargaining chips.

So on day one of a Labour Government we will immediately guarantee that all EU nationals currently living in
the UK will see no change in their legal status as a result of Brexit, and we
will seek reciprocal measures for UK citizens in the EU.

There could be no
clearer signal that Britain is taking a new approach to Brexit than a Labour
Government immediately rectifying this injustice. And there could no clearer
signal that Labour want a close and collaborative future relationship with our
EU partners.

So I can assure
you today that policy will be in Labour’s manifesto.

And we will also
set out in further detail how we will reset Britain’s approach to Brexit and
prevent a reckless Tory Brexit.

Firstly, we will
drop the Tories’ Great Repeal Bill.

The EU has had a
huge impact in securing workplace protections and environmental safeguards.
That was one the main reasons Labour and trade unions campaigned to stay in the
EU.

But we all know
that for many Brexiteers in the Tory Party, this was why they wanted to Leave.

It’s why Priti
Patel – now in the Cabinet – spoke during the referendum of wanting to ‘halve
the burdens’ of ‘EU social and employment legislation’.

A Labour
Government will never consider these rights a ‘burden’ or accept the weakening
of worker’s rights, consumer rights or environmental protections.

So instead of
going ahead with the Tories’ Great Repeal Bill we will introduce new
legislation – an EU Rights and Protections Bill.

This will make
sure that all EU-derived laws – including workplace laws, consumer rights and
environmental protections – are fully protected without qualifications,
limitations or sunset clauses. We will work with trade unions, businesses and
stakeholders to ensure there is a consensus on this vital issue. 

A Labour approach
to Brexit will ensure there can be no rolling back of key rights and
protections.

And we will go
further, because protecting existing rights can never be the summit of our
ambition. A Labour Government will work with EU partners, trade unions and
businesses to ensure that, outside the EU, the UK does not lag behind Europe in
workplace protections or environmental standards in future.

We will also make
sure that there is rigorous and independent scrutiny of any new powers this
gives to the Executive, because Brexit cannot result in a power grab by
Whitehall.

This
brings me to another commitment we will have in our manifesto: a presumption
that any new powers that are transferred back from Brussels should go straight
to the relevant devolved body.

This
will apply to regional government across England, as well as to the devolved
administrations in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

This
was a proposal included by the Mayor of London in his Brexit White Paper and it
is one a Labour Government will take forward.

A
Labour approach to Brexit will be part of a radical extension of devolution,
and will help bring the country together.

A
Tory Brexit will push the country further apart and lead to a concentration of
power in Whitehall.

A
Labour approach to Brexit will also contribute to how we rebuild a fairer, more
progressive country.

The
debate over Brexit is not happening in a vacuum.

It
will be shaped by the approach the Government you elect takes to a whole range
of wider issues – security, taxation, public services, the environment and
education.

The
Tories see Brexit as a way to further their wish to deregulate the economy,
slash corporate taxes, water down workers’ rights and remove Britain from
anything and everything European.But a Labour approach to Brexit will help ensure we have a fairer society, a
strong economy, robust workplace rights, action on climate change and a more
international, outward looking nation.

We
need a Labour Government to deliver a real living wage – giving a pay rise to
over 5million people – invest in public services and tackle the crisis in
housing, the NHS and our schools.

That
choice is on the ballot paper at this election.

If
Theresa May wins another 5 years in power, she will take it as a green light to
side-line Parliament, ignore opposition and drive through a reckless Tory
Brexit.

She
will isolate us from our nearest partners and strike trade deals with any
country that will talk to us – no matter the consequences for workers’ rights,
environmental protections or our place in the world

The
only way to stop that and to build a fairer Britain is to elect a Labour
Government.

A
Labour Government who will reset our approach to Brexit, rebuild relations with
the EU and make sure that jobs, the economy and rights come first.

We have 6 weeks to make that case.

Thank
you.

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