HomeNewsOpinionUK rapprochement with the EU looks as far away as ever

UK rapprochement with the EU looks as far away as ever

With European politics in flux, the new Labour government will find it harder to mend relations with Brussels

July 11, 2024 / 13:30 IST
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Labour Party
Labour Party campaign theme was appropriately succinct: 'Change.'

The Labour Party’s sweeping victory in the UK elections marks, you might think, a dramatic shift in the country’s prospects. If only.

Prime Minister Keir Starmer and his team promised competent, pragmatic centrism — an achievement in itself, given the party’s posture before Starmer took over. And whatever happens, the departing Conservative clown show won’t be missed. Labour’s campaign theme was appropriately succinct: “Change.” (In other words, “Anything But This.”) Unfortunately, delivering the right kind of change will be beyond difficult.

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Starmer and his chancellor of the exchequer, Rachel Reeves, face two huge obstacles. One is the UK’s dire fiscal condition. The other is the centrality of restoring economic relations with the European Union. The new government understands both problems, and much of what Starmer and Reeves have said about them is sensible. But feasible solutions are nowhere in sight.

Thanks to the pandemic and the Tories’ persistently bad fiscal management, the UK finds itself with historically high taxes, seriously underfunded public services and dangerously mounting public debt. There’s no painless cure. Fiscal control demands some mix of even higher taxes and cuts in public spending.