Britain will not rejoin EU or set up customs union, Starmer’s top negotiator warns

The minister tasked with resetting the UK’s relationship with Brussels has ruled out a customs union with the bloc – and said he does not believe Britain will ever return to the EU.

Ahead of a speech in Brussels on Monday, European affairs minister Nick Thomas-Symonds told The Independent that “there is no appetite” to return to the debates of the past on EU membership.

While he insists the government wants to develop even closer ties with the European Union, particularly as the world becomes a more dangerous place, Mr Thomas-Symonds ruled out any sort of deal which would lead to a form of the UK and EU entering a customs union.

He said that even a bespoke version, like the agreements the bloc has with countries like Turkey and Norway, was off the cards.

In December, 13 Labour MPs rebelled and backed a Lib Dem bill to rejoin the customs union which was passed in the Commons.

Mr Thomas-Symonds likened the idea of promising a customs union to the infamous Vote Leave bus which carried a message about extra funding for the NHS.

He said: “We won’t have a customs union. We will never go back to the days of making undeliverable promises on the side of red buses.”

His comments come ahead of a major speech on Brexit by chancellor Rachel Reeves on Tuesday where she will be “making the positive case” for closer alignment between Britain and the EU.

He said: “We have to be clear that alignment is not a dirty word.”

The cabinet office confirmed that he hopes to have a new deal in place on food, drink and youth movement in time for the 10th anniversary of the EU referendum on 23 June.

But asked if the UK could go back into the EU one day, he told The Independent: “I don’t see that, and I don’t see us returning to the debates of the past.

“What we’ve always been about in this is looking forward. I get a sense, because I’m talking to people up and down the country on a weekly basis, that there is support for the closer relationship that we have already built and are building.

“And I think there is no appetite to reopen the debate.”

For Labour colleagues and others who want much closer ties with the bloc, the comments will come as a disappointment.

Among the senior figures who have spoken in favour of a customs union with the EU are deputy prime minister David Lammy, who said in December that countries in such unions see a boost to their economies.

Mr Lammy said it was “self-evident” that Brexit had been economically damaging, and highlighted that Turkey had seen growth as a result of its own union with the bloc.

Weeks later health secretary Wes Streeting also called for a deeper trade ties between Britain and the EU, in comments that appeared to suggest he would be open to rejoining the customs union with the bloc.

But Mr Thomas-Symonds insisted that the UK/ EU reset so far is “already a great deal” and “guided by the British national interest” worth £9bn to the economy, which he warns would be put at risk by Nigel Farage’s Reform or Kemi Badenoch’s Tories if they won power and went ahead with plans to tear up the agreements.

The EU is negotiating for heavy penalty clauses if a future UK government should try to back out of the reset deals being negotiated in a bid to tie them in.

But he acknowledged there are challenges.

One of the major areas he is talking about is ensuring the UK is included in the EU’s “made in Europe” arrangements which could hit car makers such as Nissan in the north east of England in particular.

But he said that the UK government is “working every day, every week” to ensure that it does not lock British producers out.

“The UK and the EU are facing very similar challenges going forward. We on both sides of the channel are looking to generate growth that is central to this government’s mission. Erecting trade barriers between us is just going to create mutual damage. That’s not in either side’s interest.”