Skip to main content
Donate to the 95 years appeal
EU trade deal ‘hardwires Thatcherite economics into future relationship,’ says Labour’s No Holding Back group
Prime Minister Boris Johnson signs the EU-UK Trade and Cooperation Agreement at 10 Downing Street, London

THE trade agreement passed today “hardwires Thatcherite economics into Britain’s permanent agreement with the EU,” Labour’s No Holding Back initiative warned today.

In an analysis of the deal released just ahead of the vote, Labour MPs Ian Lavery and Jon Trickett and councillor and former MP Laura Smith said the “whole agreement amounts to market triumphalism,” noting that it defines its own objective as “the free movement of capital and payments related to transactions liberalised under this agreement.”

Any economic damage consequent on the deal will hit the poorest hardest, they argue – while measures required to stop it doing so, such as “a huge financial aid package to Britain’s struggling regions, a campaign to drive up productivity across industry, including direct intervention to build new industries [and] the refinancing of our public services” appear to be ruled out in the text of the agreement.

The agreement pushes “free and undistorted competition” and outlines measures to prevent “anticompetitive business practices [that] distort the proper functioning of markets,” a paragraph No Holding Back says “expresses the overarching theology of the whole new relationship between the UK and the EU.”

The commitments to workers’ rights in the document only rule out regression where this is “in a manner affecting trade or investment.”

The Labour Party is now faced with a decision on whether “we will seek to deepen our offer of transformative change” developed under Jeremy Corbyn or “accommodate the prevailing consensus which has existed unchanged since Thatcher,” the three conclude, arguing that Labour should set out a compelling alternative vision for a post-Brexit Britain that challenges neoliberal orthodoxy.
 

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
Louise Raw and Louise Regan with the Palestine flag and the other one is of Laura Alvarez (on the left) and Jamila Bolton-Gordon
Activism / 30 June 2025
30 June 2025

BEN CHACKO reports on the struggles against sexism, racism and the brutish British state that featured at Matchwomen’s Festival this year

George Fielding
Features / 19 June 2025
19 June 2025

GEORGE FIELDING of Not Dead Yet UK speaks to Ben Chacko as legalisation of medically facilitated suicide faces its third and final Commons reading

Similar stories
Musk’s political agenda is more sharply defined than Trump
Features / 1 January 2025
1 January 2025
Morning Star editor BEN CHACKO says the status quo cannot last – but those currently poised to replace it would usher in a nightmarish new era
France's President Emmanuel Macron gestures as he delivers a
Features / 10 October 2024
10 October 2024
The French president and the European Central Bank have identified ‘more of the same’ neoliberal agenda as the answer to the EU’s woes – but can post-Brexit Britain grasp the opportunity to reject continued austerity, asks NICK WRIGHT
European Union flags wave in the wind as pedestrians walk by
Features / 25 July 2024
25 July 2024
As Starmer hints at closer ties, MARTIN HALL warns of the dangers of creeping alignment and calls for a renewed socialist case for independence from Brussels, especially over the EU’s constraints on economic planning