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...It is the first step of where we’d want to get to,” one of the insiders reportedly said, adding they were reflecting new internal thinking on the EU relationship within the Labour leadership....
...For me, the apparently simple practice of paying attention to what I’d read the previous year had unexpected ripple effects....
...The whole episode is worth chewing over because it illustrates how far both sides need to go to avoid triggering those powerful — and I’d argue, destructive — old Brexit reflexes....
...The government said it was committed to supporting companies as they adapt to new border checks, adding that its “engagement with businesses in advance of these checks ha[d] been extensive”....
...This being the season of redemption and resurrection, I thought I’d start with a couple of cheerier Brexit stories for once....
...And yet, in true Brexit style, these charges come at the eleventh hour (they start in just 26 days time, on April 30) after five delays and a flip-flop over whether they’d be needed at all....
...This being the Brexit watchers’ newsletter, you’d expect me to point out that there was a conspicuous absentee among Hunt’s list of reasons why the UK remains in the grip of a productivity slump that started...
...The UK spends billions on R&D but relative peanuts on the gatekeepers that bring products to market. The balance needs to be adjusted. And relatively speaking, you’ll get a lot of bang for your buck....
...Peter Foster, the FT’s public policy editor, is here to tell us more. Hi, Peter. Peter FosterHi....
...After I’d had enough of McAllister’s diktats, I dived into To Marry an English Lord (1989) by Gail MacColl and Carol McD Wallace, which partly inspired Fellowes’ previous series, Downton Abbey....
...“I think at the latest we’d like to see this settled by the Washington summit,” she told reporters. “I think you’re well aware that the US position is that we fully back Mark Rutte.”...
...“If you were to think of medicines as a regional security issue, you’d want the whole of Europe, including the UK, to be resilient. The world has changed....
...So while, as you’d expect, left-leaning Guardian readers are 78-15 in favour of change, and Financial Times readers take a consensus 63-30 position that the Tories should go, the Conservative-leaning papers...
...“Compared to the billions spent annually on upstream R&D, the budget for downstream regulators to help get these innovations to market is minimal,” says Ringer at Form Ventures, who proposed eventually increasing...
...“I used to drive and it would take me 45 minutes and I’d spend a tenner on parking. This takes me five minutes right into town.”...
...We’re still in the foothills of 2024, so I thought that as I closed before Christmas with a review of last year, today I’d look ahead to what might — and might not — happen in Brexitland over the next 12...
...If we’d kept doing what we were doing I think we’d be thriving....
...A lot of conversations went along the lines of: “You’re so lucky, we’re handcuffed to Brussels, but if we Italians had not joined the euro we’d have voted to leave by now too.”...
...“We’d like realism on the need for investment in the underlying infrastructure. We can’t flick a switch,” said Hartley....
...Shared interests Thinking about mutual strategic interest, it was notable that Haviland said she’d raised the issue of the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) and alignment on emissions trading schemes...
...There'd be UKCA marked products which you could sell in the UK. And if you wanted to sell goods in the European Union you'd have to have CE marking for those items....
...One was that we’d get killed. The other was that we might have to kill someone.”...
...But there are key elements of Starmer’s promise to “attract new investment to our industrial heartlands from Bridgend to Burnley” that are much more intertwined with Brexit policy issues than you’d ever...
...“We’d like to use those engineering skills in some other way, but the longer it goes on, the harder it gets” as the skills base dissipates, he said....
...The companies accused the government of a “lack of transparency” about the billions of pounds in taxpayer support it had offered when selling Bulb, arguing they would have made a bid if they’d been properly...
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