
By any honest measure, Keir Starmer has declared open war on Brexit - and by extension, on the British people who voted for it. What we're witnessing is nothing less than a complete betrayal. But don't be fooled. Starmer is not negotiating with the EU - he's simply capitulating to them.
A lifelong Europhile and dyed-in-the-wool globalist, Starmer made it abundantly clear where his loyalties lie when he said he'd rather be at Davos rubbing shoulders with the elitist crowd at the World Economic Forum than doing the job he was elected to do in Westminster. That alone should've been enough to set alarm bells ringing. But now the mask is off. This week's so-called 'reset' of Brexit isn't a reset - it's a reversal.
The new agreement, unveiled with a smiling Ursula von der Leyen beside him, reads like a wish list drawn up in Brussels.
Starmer isn't just turning the clock back; he's throwing the 2016 referendum under a Eurostar and offering up our national sovereignty on a silver platter.
Let's not forget that Brexit was the largest democratic vote in British history. It wasn't a grey-area result.
It was a clear, unambiguous instruction from the people to their government - take back control.
And at every opportunity since, the public has reiterated that call. Yet, in Starmer's world,
the will of the people is little more than a speed bump on his path back to EU alignment.
This new deal is riddled with concessions that would make even Michel Barnier blush.
Starmer's Government has agreed to let French boats continue plundering UK waters until 2038 - nearly 15 years from now.
That's 14 years and 11 months longer than the four he originally offered. In return, we get... what, exactly? Looser food border checks? Less "red tape" for travel? At what cost?
We now face binding regulatory alignment with the EU - meaning we will be handcuffed to Brussels' rules, without a seat at the table.
Sovereignty? Out the window. Competitive global trade deals? Hamstrung. And let's be clear - regulatory alignment isn't cooperation. It's subjugation. It ensures we can't deviate to gain competitive advantage and locks us into a legislative straitjacket, tailor-made by unelected EU technocrats.
And just when you thought it couldn't get any worse, there's the youth "mobility" scheme - free movement for 18 to 30-year-olds, all dressed up as an "experience exchange."
Sadiq Khan let the truth slip: it's about filling vacancies. Translation? More mass migration, more pressure on housing and public services, and another slap in the face to British workers.
So much for that promised crackdown on immigration. There's no transparency here - just vague talk of "mutual benefit" and "joint costs" without any accountability.
The Government refuses to tell us how much this mess will cost the taxpayer, only that it will somehow magically return £9 billion a year by 2040. That's fifteen years away.
Meanwhile, Britain pays into EU coffers, surrenders defence contract autonomy, and aligns with EU carbon markets. That's not a deal - it's a ransom note.
Even worse, Starmer has agreed to amend the original trade treaty - opening the door for the EU to impose tariffs if a future UK government dares to rip up this disaster.
This so-called 'Reform clause' is nothing but a trapdoor for any party hoping to restore true independence.
Starmer isn't trying to fix Brexit. He's trying to bury it. And he hopes the next general election will serve as a de facto second referendum - one where he can mask Labour's domestic failures behind the smokescreen of EU appeasement.
This isn't about economics, it's about ideology. Starmer is a globalist to his core. He doesn't believe in national borders. He doesn't trust the British people to govern themselves.
And he's more comfortable in Brussels boardrooms than in British communities.
If this deal is allowed to stand, Brexit is finished. Sovereignty is finished. Democracy, as we know it, is finished.
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