UK public showing  signs of Brexit remorse

 

Condemnation of the EU-UK trade deal from British businesses as well as a perceived rise in immigration levels into the UK has resulted in the British public beginning to show signs of Brexit remorse says The Week.

Research by the British Chambers of Commerce (BCC) found more than three-quarters of firms trading with the EU see the existing Brexit deal as no help at all when it comes to increasing sales or growing their businesses. In the survey of more than 1,100 businesses, 92% of which were SMEs, as many as 77% said the Brexit deal had not helped them to increase sales or expand.

The BCC has put a list of demands to the government that includes “a side deal with the EU to reduce red tape on food exports, as well as measures to ease VAT, working visa and other hurdles”, reported Politico’s London Playbook. The body is also pushing for a swift resolution to the controversial Northern Ireland Protocol dispute.

It comes as Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has had to contend with suggestions he wants a closer alignment with the EU and with polling showing “voters now consistently believe that Britain’s decision to leave the EU was the wrong one”, said The New Statesman.

Business owners and leaders who spoke to the BCC “were scathing about the Brexit arrangements 24 months on from the end of the transition period”, added Politico.

Uncompetitive 
“Leaving the EU made us uncompetitive with our EU customers,” said one retailer from Scotland. “Exporting goods into the EU since Brexit continues to prove difficult,” said a manufacturer in the East Midlands, while another in Dorset added: “Brexit has been the biggest ever imposition of bureaucracy on business.”

Shevaun Haviland, the BCC’s director-general, said that with “a recession looming, we must remove the shackles holding back our exporters. If we don’t do this now then the long-term competitiveness of the UK could be seriously damaged.”

But Mark Spencer, the food minister, insisted that the government was making progress on reducing bureaucracy and helping businesses. Spencer told Times Radio: “We’re a free and open trading nation. We want to work closely with our EU colleagues, we want to try and reduce that red tape if there is any red tape on their side of the channel, we want to keep those channels of trade open in both directions.”

The BCC’s complaints came as the Financial Times reported that the UK’s associate membership of the EU’s €95bn Horizon research program, which had been “foreseen in the Brexit deal”, has been “blocked by the EU because of a bitter dispute over post-Brexit trading arrangements in Northern Ireland”.

“Why would we sign another agreement with the UK until they comply with the ones we already have?” one EU official told the FT.

These Brexit woes have been compounded for Sunak by recent polling that shows voters believe Brexit “has triggered a surge in immigration from the European Union, despite arrivals from the continent falling since 2016”, said The Telegraph.