UK-EU Summit: Key Issues And Potential Outcomes

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer is hosting EU chiefs at a summit on Monday, the first of its kind since Brexit, as he tries to deepen relations with the bloc.

UK PM Keir Starmer hosts EU chiefs at a summit to strengthen post-Brexit ties, negotiating a defence pact, fishing rights, and aligning standards. Youth mobility remains a key issue, with the UK open to a controlled scheme amid immigration concerns.

UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer is hosting EU chiefs at a summit on Monday, the first of its kind since Brexit, as he tries to deepen relations with the bloc.

Here are the main issues at stake, with sensitive details still being thrashed out in hardball negotiations that are set to go down to the wire.

– Defence pact –

Both parties are hopeful of reaching agreement on a security deal as Europe races to rearm over fears about Russian aggression and that President Donald Trump is uncommitted to protecting the continent.

The deal would allow Britain to attend certain ministerial meetings and take part in some European military initiatives and missions.

It would also aim to further involve the British defence industry in European efforts to develop its own military industrial base, benefiting UK defence companies such as BAE Systems and Rolls-Royce.

The deal could lead to London accessing a 150-billion-euro ($167-billion) defence fund being set up by the bloc although a further agreement would be needed to give Britain’s defence industry full access to the EU programmes.

Discussions have been complicated by some EU countries, including France, working behind the scenes to link the signing of the defence partnership to the renewal of an agreement giving EU fishing boats access to British waters.

EU foreign affairs chief Kaja Kallas voiced confidence this week that fish quotas do not need to be agreed before penning the security deal.

But negotiations on this point were heading for the eleventh hour, with EU diplomats yet to sign off on the compromise being drawn up by the European Commission.

The current five-year fishing agreement expires in 2026.

EU countries want the agreement rolled over, in return for slashing red tape for British food exports — a key item on London’s wish list.

But Britain is understood to be offering four more years of access to its waters, less than hoped for on the EU side — which may seek to curtail the food checks deal as a result.

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