The UK and the EU will announce new deals and renew ties, 5 years after
Brexit
[May 19, 2025] By
SYLVIA HUI, PAN PYLAS and JILL LAWLESS
LONDON (AP) — The United Kingdom and the European Union are expected to
announce new deals on fishing rights and defense cooperation as
officials met in London on Monday for their first formal summit since
Brexit.
The government of British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, who met with
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and other senior EU
officials, billed the summit as a major milestone in resetting relations
with the 27-nation trade bloc.
British media reported Monday that the two sides agreed on a deal on
fishing access for EU boats in U.K. waters ahead of the summit.
Officials were also set to announce details of a new U.K.-EU defense and
security partnership that will allow the U.K. to access a EU defense
loan program, the reports said.
“Historic day ... Britain back on the world stage,” Cabinet Office
minister Nick Thomas-Symonds, who was leading negotiations, posted on
social media Monday, without providing details on the deals.
Starmer's government hopes that the agreements could improve the British
economy, which has been hit by a drop in EU trade caused by increased
costs and red tape after the United Kingdom left the bloc in 2020.
Resetting relations
Since becoming prime minister in July, Starmer has sought to reset
relations with the EU, following years of tensions in the wake of the
U.K.'s 2016 Brexit referendum.
Post-Brexit relations have been governed by a trade agreement negotiated
by then Prime Minister Boris Johnson. Starmer thinks that can be
improved in a way that boosts trade and bolsters security.

“This is about making people better off, about making the country more
secure, about making sure there are more jobs in the U.K.,” Trade
Secretary Jonathan Reynolds told Times Radio.
Stronger ties with the EU will bring “more benefits for the United
Kingdom” following trade agreements that the U.K. struck in recent weeks
with India and the United States, Starmer said.
Non-tariff barriers
Though no tariffs are slapped on the export of goods between both sides,
an array of non-tariff barriers, including more onerous border checks
and laborious paperwork, have made trade more difficult.
Post-Brexit visa restrictions have also hobbled the cross-border
activities of professionals such as bankers or lawyers, as well as
cultural exchanges, including touring bands and school trips.
Since the Labour Party took power last year after 14 years of
Conservative government, a period that was largely marked by upheavals
surrounding the Brexit vote and its aftermath, both sides have sought to
improve relations.
That’s been most evident in the more coordinated response to Russia’s
full-scale invasion of Ukraine in the wake of a change of approach by
Washington following the return of U.S. President Donald Trump.
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Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer, right, kisses European
Commission President Ursula von der Leyen as she arrives with
European Council President Antonio Costa to attend a United Kingdom
and European Union summit at Lancaster House, London, Monday, May
19, 2025. (Henry Nicholls/Pool Photo via AP)
 But Starmer has stressed that the
U.K. won't rejoin the EU's frictionless single market and customs
union, nor agree to the free movement of people between the U.K. and
the EU.
Security, fishing and youth mobility
Talks on strengthening ties have focused largely on security and
defense, and on a youth mobility plan that would allow young Britons
and Europeans to live and work temporarily in each other’s
territory.
That remains a politically touchy issue in the U.K., seen by some
Brexiteers as inching back toward free movement — though the U.K.
already has youth mobility arrangements with countries including
Australia and Canada.
Another issue that has long been a sticking point in U.K.-EU
relations is fishing — an economically minor but symbolically
important issue for the U.K. and EU member states such as France.
Disputes over the issue nearly derailed a Brexit deal back in 2020.
The summit is also expected to cover aligning standards on the sale
of agricultural products, which could eliminate costly checks on
food products exported across the English Channel.
Thomas-Symonds said he was confident that trade could be improved
for food imports and exports.
“We know we’ve had lorries waiting for 16 hours, fresh food in the
back not able to be exported, because frankly it’s just going off,
red tape, all the certifications that are required, we absolutely
want to reduce that,” he told the BBC.
Opposition objects to a ‘surrender’
Some of the trade-offs may prove difficult for Starmer, who faces
growing challenges from the pro-Brexit and anti-immigration Reform
U.K. party and will likely see accusations of “betraying Brexit,”
whatever the outcome of the talks.
Reform, which recently won big in local elections, and the
opposition Conservative Party have already called the deal a
“surrender” to the EU before any details were confirmed.
Trump, who has backed Brexit, could also be a potential headache for
Starmer.
“The reset could still be blown off course by disagreements over how
to consolidate existing areas of cooperation like fisheries and/or
external factors, such as a negative reaction from the U.S. to the
U.K. seeking closer ties with the EU,” said Jannike Wachowiak,
research associate at the UK in a Changing Europe think tank.
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