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BERLIN — U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer insisted he is not seeking to reverse Brexit as he pitched a “wider reset” of Britain’s ties with Europe on a much-hyped trip to Germany.
Starmer, whose center-left Labour Party took over from the Conservatives last month, was warmly welcomed by Chancellor Olaf Scholz on a trip to Berlin, where the pair talked up a new bilateral treaty aimed at repairing ties frayed by Britain’s exit from the European Union.
“I am delighted that Keir Starmer has announced that he will seek a fresh start in his relationship with the European Union,” Scholz said at a joint press conference alongside Starmer Wednesday. “We want to grasp this outstretched hand.”
Starmer arrived in Berlin pledging to “turn a corner on Brexit” after the rancor between Europe and the U.K. in the years following Britain’s 2016 Brexit vote.
The first Labour leader to take charge in Britain since 2010, Starmer has been keen to stress a “once in a generation opportunity to reset” relations.
Charming Berlin is seen as key to his bid to draw Britain back towards the bloc’s orbit — without being seen by Brexiteers back home as betraying the result of the eight-year-old referendum.
Starmer and Scholz have already fired the starting gun on six months of negotiations for what Downing Street billed as an unprecedented new treaty covering trade, defense and security. Starmer told the press conference he wants to move faster than that — wrapping up the treaty by the end of the year.
That sharp timeline is important — bleak polling for Scholz’s Social Democratic Party suggests his months in office may be numbered.
“I’m absolutely clear that we do want a reset,” Starmer said Wednesday. But he added: “That does not mean reversing Brexit or re-entering the [EU’s] single market or the customs union.”
The trip also highlighted just how much pressure both leaders face on migration, an issue that came up repeatedly in press questions.
Starmer pointedly said the U.K. has “no plans” to set-up a much feted youth mobility scheme — which would ease restrictions on Brits and EU nationals studying and working abroad — as part of his reset, although he did not directly rule out such a proposal.
The U.K. leader also talked up “substantive discussions” with Scholz on curbing illegal migration, including an as-yet vague “joint action plan” on the issue.
For his part, Scholz, who is under mounting pressure domestically in the wake of a deadly stabbing attack in Solingen and the arrest of a Syrian national suspect, sought to strike a tough-sounding tone on irregular migration.
“We have massively expanded controls at the German borders and will continue to do so for as long as possible,” he said. “And yet the numbers are nowhere near what the citizens expect.”
He added: “If you want legal immigration, you have to limit irregular migration so that the country is not overwhelmed. This can and must be achieved without calling international agreements, European law or the constitution into question. We owe this to the victims of Solingen.”
Next stop for Starmer is Paris. He’ll be attending the Paralympics Opening Ceremony and will use the opportunity to pop by the Elysée Palace for talks with French President Emmanuel Macron.
Noah Keate contributed reporting.