
L’UE chiede un riavvio urgente dei colloqui con il Regno Unito per impedire il fallimento dell’accordo di ripristino | Unione Europea
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/mar/16/eu-urgent-reboot-uk-talks-stop-reset-deal-failing
di AdSpecialist6598
13 commenti
Forget the brits. Give them a copy of the swiss or Turkey agrements and ask them to sign the same. Or just ask them to come back in 5years.
Nice try the guardian but hell no
Hilarious. The UK and the EU come to a verbal agreement, and then the EU backtracks and demands more concessions. The UK needs to walk away.
Could the EU stop adding things on just before we finalise the deal please?
People who sold Brexit lie are getting really desperate and trying really hard to derail any progress in undoing the damage of Brexit. Unfortunately, it looks like current UK leadership is rather weak and panic easily. Grow a spine and fuck Forage goons. UK belongs to EU. The only group of UK public which “thinks” otherwise are working for Putin.
Apart from being added later, it is a reasonable request from the EU side.
Could have been incompetence that they did not add it to the first draft.
Let it fail, we’re all bored of this now.
Fuck the Guardian:
>The EU is hoping to urgently reboot talks on the “reset” of relations with the UK as negotiations are in danger of foundering before a planned July summit.
>At a public meeting of the EU-UK parliamentary partnership assembly in Brussels, the European Commission vice-president and trade commissioner, Maroš Šefčovič, said both sides had to “change gears” now to ensure the deal got over the line.
>Deadlock over the tuition fees EU citizens would pay in a proposed youth mobility scheme is a major challenge, he said, while the UK’s trade minister, Chris Bryant, said that talks on a sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) agreement was tricky because of the amount of legislation needed in the British parliament.
>Šefčovič told the MPs and MEPs on Monday that finding agreement before the next summit – pencilled in for early July – was “very ambitious”.
>But he added: “We need to change gears and work through complexities.”
>He repeatedly called for a compromise on tuition fees, the first time he has spoken publicly on the issue since a so-called “common understanding” or formal agenda for a reset between the EU and UK was signed off last May in Lancaster House.
>Keir Starmer, the prime minister, has put agreeing a new deal with Brussels at the centre of his economic and foreign policy, and is hoping to announce a number of agreements at the summit this summer.
>While talks on SPS and on emissions trading rules are well advanced, the two sides are deadlocked over whether EU students should be charged the same fees as British ones rather than the higher international ones, which they currently have to pay.
>“To come to an agreement on the youth experience scheme, we will need a solution of tuition fees,” said Šefčovič.
>The disagreement threatens to scupper not only the planned summit but also the broader plans to realign with the EU, which the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, will highlight in a speech on Tuesday as central to her growth agenda.
>Officials have told the Guardian that Nick Thomas-Symonds, the Cabinet Office minister in charge of negotiations with Brussels, is already working on which other parts of the economy would benefit from following EU regulations.
>Thomas-Symonds has instructed officials to conduct a “scoping exercise” to find out where companies are already complying with EU rules and so it no longer makes sense to apply separate UK ones. In return the two countries could then remove border checks on those goods.
>It is understood that the government believes all sectors apart from financial services and some hi-tech industries such as artificial intelligence might benefit from this approach.
>Brussels sources said the UK is looking to draw up an agenda for the 2026 and 2027 reset, with a deal on touring artists, mutual recognition of professional qualifications and the elimination of costly dual regulation of chemicals high on the UK’s priorities.
>At the parliamentary assembly Šefčovič also revealed one element of the 2020 trade and cooperation agreement signed by David Frost that had failed – a deal to allow people servicing equipment and machinery in the UK to have work visas for up to 180 days.
>“Only 49 visas were granted in 2025. That is a very low number of visas and shows the scheme does not work,” he said.
>Attempts for a wider realignment are likely to be put on ice, however, if the two governments cannot find a way past the student fees issue.
>Sefčovič said EU student numbers in the UK had collapsed and it was vital in “this very turbulent world” that relations between future generations were fostered through education in each other’s countries.
>“We should avoid the situation where we would be depriving our young generation from the common knowledge, common history.
>“I know that it is challenging, it is difficult, but I believe that on both sides of the channel there is a strong wish from elected representatives of the people that we should solve this problem,” he said.
>EU students before Brexit represented 27% of the student population but the intake for the 2026-2027 academic year is 5%.
>The “slow” and methodical nature of talks didn’t help, said Bryant.
>“Our system is very slow and let me put it this way, the European Union isn’t much faster. And when you put the two of us together, I don’t think it drives the pace of change that actually all of our voters and our communities really, really want and actually need economically.”
>Thomas-Symonds said he took onboard the sense of urgency MEPs and MPs were looking for.
>“The message I take from this room very much today is about putting our foot on the accelerator,” he said.
>The Labour MP Stella Creasy said the UK was still “marriage” material and hoped that the competing voices in the party leadership, those insisting on red lines and those wishing to move closer to the EU did not stymie a deal.
>“It is precisely because we are not yet willing to go bigger that these negotiations are turning out to be so hard.”
I wonder why Starmer’s reset is going in a bad direction, when the UK cannot even address the issues on time.
The UK is still a PITA in the rest of Europe in 2026, for fuck’s sake.
The reboot of the reset better be remastered carefully, don’t want a remix of the redux.
FYI the UK negotiators and the Brits in this thread are lying. There was no last minute change by the EU when it comes to home tuition fees, it’s been a request by the Council since it instructed the Commission to negotiate when Sunak was prime minister
https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/qanda_24_2109
>For instance, it would aim at ensuring that EU citizens can undertake traineeships in the UK, even when those traineeships are connected to studies in the EU. It would also provide for equal treatment (i.e., non-discrimination) between EU and UK citizens in respect of higher education tuition fees.
>The UK’s Youth Mobility Scheme does not address the issues most frequently raised by young people in the context of mobility between the EU and the UK:
>the question of equal treatment of EU students with United Kingdom nationals on issues such as tuition fees;
>Tuition fees in EU public universities are generally not that high for international (non-EU) students.
>The envisaged agreement would provide for equal treatment of EU and UK students as regards higher education tuition fees.
Here are multiple news articles reporting the same last year before/during the EU-UK reset summit
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/may/15/eu-and-uk-at-loggerheads-over-fishing-rights-and-youth-mobility
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2025/05/07/eu-demand-cheaper-tuition-fees-in-starmers-reset-deal/
https://www.politico.eu/article/its-crunch-time-for-the-brexit-reset/
https://www.ft.com/content/4d2d78b0-eedd-485c-9a9c-4e41baf46146
I’m happy that the Commission is not budging and sticking to its red lines without falling for the bait. All these tards can do is lie and then whine that “thE eU iS tReAtInG uS uNfAIrLy”
The EUs needs some collateral in case Farage gets elected
We just need to rejoin at this point and pretend the last 10 years didn’t happen.