Jump directly to the content
Comment
THE SUN SAYS

Sneaky Starmer cannot admit wanting to rewrite Brexit – but he can get much of the way there by stealth

Slippery Labour

WHO should we believe over Labour’s plan to neuter Brexit?

Keir Starmer, caught off guard in Canada admitting that as PM he would stick slavishly to EU rules?

Sir Keir Starmer has all but confirmed his plans to reverse Brexit wherever possible
1
Sir Keir Starmer has all but confirmed his plans to reverse Brexit wherever possibleCredit: Getty

Or shadow chancellor Rachel Reeves, sent out to smooth over his disastrous gaffe and reassure Leavers?

Truth is, Starmer has always loathed Brexit.

Labour cannot admit wanting to officially rejoin any part of the EU, but he can get much of the way there by stealth.

Brussels won’t just give him the “better deal” he claims he could secure — not without him sacrificing some key aspect of our hard-won independence.

READ MORE ON STARMER

Which? Starmer has let that slip.

He would follow Brussels diktat.

Later, having done so long enough, he could perhaps argue we might as well be back in.

Labour was every bit as sneaky and undemocratic under Blair and Brown — and again when Starmer himself tried to reverse the 2016 referendum verdict.

The Remainer-in-chief would not “make Brexit work”. He wouldn’t even keep it safe.

Get tax down

WE are baffled why Jeremy Hunt would ignite Tory infighting by glibly crushing hopes of a tax cut in a radio interview.

We accept we needed a steadier Chancellor after the Liz Truss debacle.

And inflation and our massive debt payments are still worrying.

But no Tory Government should readily maintain the highest tax burden in 70 years as it kills growth and hurts families.

It should be bold, slash public spending, free up money to ease households’ pain and attract job-creating investment.

Labour would do none.

So Mr Hunt can still remind the public of one key reason to vote Tory: Lower taxes.

Doesn’t add up

A-LEVELS are ripe for reinvention. But we cannot see the merit in making kids study maths to 18, as Rishi Sunak wants.

Yes, employers would love school-leavers with a wider range of skills a new “British baccalaureate” might provide.

But most jobs never require maths beyond the level of, say, a 14-year-old.

Plus, we don’t have enough maths teachers.

And Mr Sunak wouldn’t act until after the next election anyway.

It may, then, all be academic.

Secret justice

OUR courts must never hold rape trials in secret, as the Law Commission proposes.

It claims excluding the public and almost all Press would ease victims’ stress.

But they are already anonymous for life and can testify via video link.

Open justice is sacred.

READ MORE SUN STORIES

Abandon it for certain cases and they will go unreported . . . so a rapist’s further victims would never know to come forward.

It is sinister — and must be rejected.

Topics