Early indications are that Keir Starmer will announce an as yet un-named bill in the King's Speech (in May) that will underpin the (re)alignment with a range of EU laws thereby making more concrete the emerging strategy of re-engaging with EU regulations sector by sector.

However, it is unlikely that this will still the accusation(s) from Europe that the UK still seeks to cherry-pick the advantages of the EU, while avoiding a range of collective commitments.

#EU #politics #Brexit
h/t FT

@ChrisMayLA6

They're right.

It's the same old cherry picking.

We should #RejoinEU as normal members, with the same deal as the others. We'd still be miles better off than the current mess.

@Walrus @ChrisMayLA6

Having watched the Brexit-negotiations, I think we can safely translate "you're cherry picking" into "you're not getting this".

However, it is also true that the EU would have preferred a much more extensive agreement to what they got, so there's a lot on offer to a trustworthy partner.

That being said, I'm not sure when and to what extent the UK is considered a trustworthy partner.

@SuneAuken @Walrus @ChrisMayLA6 out of all the evils to come out of the current wave of right-wing extremism, the erosion of trust among allies feels like the one that will take longest to heal.

From the US perspective, the sheer amount of trust we’ve squandered is just…depressing.

@BilldeWorde7a @SuneAuken @Walrus @ChrisMayLA6

It has simultaneously strengthened the links between the former allies of the US.