00:00Our political editor asked the European Council President Antonio Costa today if this was the end of the road to rejoin.
00:08He said yes, he didn't want that. Can you confirm, is this the end of any attempt by a Labour government to get us back into the European Union?
00:17Or is this something altogether different, negotiating away power treaty by treaty, one at a time?
00:23Well, we said very clearly in our manifesto that we would not rejoin the customs union, the single market or go back into free movement.
00:32And it is certainly not. We are not going to be rejoining the European Union.
00:37We respect the vote that was held some years ago. Gosh, it feels like a long time ago, doesn't it?
00:42But we did say in our manifesto that we would improve on the deal that we had with the EU.
00:46This deal today brings massive economic benefits for businesses that export to the EU.
00:53The EU is our major trading partner, and it also brings benefits to those of us who go on holiday to European Union countries and security and defence, the partnership.
01:02That is a real benefit, too, in terms of our security.
01:06And given that we have an ongoing war on our continent that is, you know, in an insecure world, that is not to be neglected, too.
01:12What would you say to those people? Remember, the Prime Minister said he felt more at home in Davos than in Westminster.
01:19Does this kind of deal today suggest, actually, Skiir Starmer is more at home in Brussels?
01:25Well, Switzerland isn't a member of the EU, so that's probably worth saying.
01:31Look, the Prime Minister has negotiated a deal which is good for British business, good for British consumers and good for British holidaymakers who have been subject to massive delays at European borders.
01:43They will now be able to go, once this deal is in place, on this issue to E-gate so they don't have to queue to get into countries across the European Union.
01:53It looks like there are going to be rebellions for the Labour Party on the winter fuel allowance, on PIP cuts, on benefits cuts, on farming.
02:01Do you think you now might face a substantial revolt in the Red Wall, in coastal communities who are trying to sell to their constituents what many people in the Red Wall are saying feels like a betrayal of Brexit,
02:14and certainly on the coast, saying that the Labour Party has just sold our fishing industry down the river?
02:18This is not a betrayal of Brexit.
02:20We promised the British people that we would forge a closer relationship in a pragmatic and commonsensical way with our nearest and biggest trading partner.
02:30That's good for British business and it's good for British consumers because it will bring food bills down and it will allow our businesses who export to the EU a much easier path to doing those exports,
02:40some of whom had already given up due to the barriers that have been put up.
02:43So this is a pragmatic solution to improving the deal that we inherited from the last government,
02:49which was no good for business and wasn't good for consumers either.
02:53Okay, I'm going to go to the next level.
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03:04Okay, I'm going to go to the next level.
03:05Okay, I'm going to go to the next level.
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