UK won't get special EU terms if it rejoins, Brexit veterans warn
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- Brexit negotiators warn the UK would not regain its past special terms if it sought to rejoin the EU.
- Senior Labour figures have discussed future re-entry, but former officials stress membership would be on "normal terms," requiring the pooling of sovereignty.
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Senior figures within the UK's Labour Party have begun discussing the possibility of rejoining the European Union in the future. However, veterans of the Brexit negotiations and former EU officials have cautioned that such a re-entry would not be on the special terms the UK previously held.
Britain would not be able to rejoin the EU on the special terms it enjoyed in the past, veterans of the Brexit negotiations have said.
According to former officials from around Europe, the UK should not expect to achieve as beneficial a deal as it once had if it decided to begin negotiations on re-entry.
The warnings came as senior Labour politicians jostling for the leadership of their party and country talk openly about wanting to return to the union at some point in the future.
Georg Riekeles, a former adviser on the EUâs Brexit taskforce, said he expected member states would take âa very warm, welcomingâ stance but also a âhard-headedâ one to a British membership application.
âThere is a strategic need for the EU and the UK to work together, but I donât think there would be an appetite for opening up new decades of British exceptionalism,â he said. âThe price of re-entry would be membership on normal terms.â
During its 47 years of EU membership, the UK achieved an unprecedented special status: opt-outs from core policies, such as the single currency and the Schengen passport-free zone, as well as a rebate on EU budget payments, while carving out an agenda-setting role.
Sandro Gozi, Italyâs Europe minister from 2014-18, said âcertainly we will startâ with those standard terms, when asked about the euro and Schengen zone membership in any re-entry negotiations. âIt is clear that the tailor-made suit is gone, and it is clear that the negotiation of the UK should tackle all the issues which are foreseen for any candidate.â
Gozi, now an MEP and chair of the European parliamentâs delegation to the EU-UK parliamentary partnership assembly, predicted EU member states would welcome a British application to rejoin despite the uncertainty of a possible Nigel Farage premiership.
Wes Streeting argued over the weekend that the UK should rejoin the EU in the future. Even though the former health secretaryâs allies say this could not happen without an election or referendum to gain permission from British voters, his comments reignited long-dormant rifts over Europe at the top of the ruling Labour party.
Andy Burnham, the Greater Manchester mayor, who is seeking a return to Westminster to challenge the prime minister, has previously said he wants Britain to rejoin the bloc within his lifetime. On Monday however he clarified that he would not try to make that happen if he became prime minister in the short term.
â[Brexit] has been a major disaster for the UK, but it has also been a loss for the EU ⊠If in a moment of such a huge global turmoil, the UK decided to ask to rejoin the EU, I think that for our political model it would be a great victory.â He stressed this was not a victory over the UK but about its âattractivenessâ.
Britain, he said, had other options, such as âbeing associated with the single marketâ and being a founder of a new European security council, a proposed defence leadership bodythat could involve up to a dozen members, but has yet to be fully detailed. âI think that the options are more than simply the full accession. But that would be very much up to the UK to make up their mind, to understand what they want,â he said.
Polandâs anglophile foreign minister, RadosĆaw Sikorski, has also warned Britain not to expect a similar deal to its âde-facto Ă la carte membershipâ of the past. British elites, he said earlier this month, needed to âinternaliseâ the fundamental European deal âthat you get more benefits in return for pooling of some aspects of sovereigntyâ.
An application from the UK â a former member that went through a bitter divorce â was also regarded as unlike any other.
Riekeles, now an associate director at the European Policy Centre, said many in European capitals and Brussels were welcoming âthe spirit and signalsâ from the UK but stressed this was a long way from a formal process. âThe EU would need to see a durable national consensus that the UK has really changed its mind.â
Reflecting on his own experience, he said: âThe EU can work with a UK that knows what it wants. It struggles with a UK that wants the benefits of integration while keeping the politics of separation.â
âThe world of Brexit is gone,â he said alluding to Russian militarism, Chinese economic coercion and Donald Trumpâs âAmerica firstâ policy. âI think everybody with their full senses should see that the UK and the EU are part of the same strategic space. If this was the national consensus [for the UK to rejoin] ⊠I think the EU would engage all in, very seriously. But are we there now? Not yet.â
The European Commissionâs chief spokesperson, Paula Pinho, declined to comment on potential negotiating terms. Referring to an upcoming EU-UK summit, widely expected in early July, she said: âThere are discussions on closer cooperation on a number of areas. That is where we are and that is also what we are doing, precisely in preparation of the next summit, rather than speculating about big, new or renewed issues.â
Worauf zu achten ist
KI-Ausblick â Möglichkeiten, keine Fakten
The EU will require the UK to join on standard terms, without special opt-outs.
Sehr wahrscheinlich · Mittelfristig
The UK will need to demonstrate a durable national consensus for rejoining the EU.
Wahrscheinlich · Mittelfristig
Offene Fragen
- What would be the specific 'normal terms' for UK re-entry into the EU?
- What is the current level of national consensus in the UK regarding rejoining the EU?
- What are the detailed proposals for a new European security council?
- What is the timeline for the upcoming EU-UK summit?






