Key events
Shadow foreign secretary Priti Patel has said that Keir Starmer cannot be trusted over any negotiations on Gibraltar. Asked on the GB News channel whether she thought the government was in the process of giving Gibraltar away, Patel said:
We should never trust Keir Starmer. You know, he’s screwing things up domestically, so he gets on the international bandwagon.
He’s selling us out, not just on Brexit, but on Chagos and … we’re hearing all sorts of things about Gibraltar. We’ll hold them to account on this. Where Labour negotiates, Britain always seem to lose.
Jessica Elgot, our deputy political editor, reports that Labour is to cancel its national women’s conference and restrict all-women shortlists as it awaits full guidance from the equalities watchdog, sparking criticism from trans rights and gender critical campaigners. You can find that here.
If you missed it, yesterday Pippa Crerar and Kiran Stacey covered the UK-EU trade deal in our Politics Weekly podcast. You can listen to that here.
Industry minister Sarah Jones criticised the previous government’s attitude to the European Union, while ruling out the prospect of rejoining.
Speaking on Good Morning Britain, she said:
The worst of both worlds was when we had a prime minister who couldn’t even say whether France was an ally, and we had such entrenched ideological positions that we got absolutely nowhere.
What we have here is a deal where we’re not rejoining the EU. We know what our red lines are on the customs union, single market. I don’t need to rehearse those.
Where we do a deal on particular aspects of trade, there has to be an agreement about the rules of the game to stop one side shafting the other, apart from anything else.
Minister: UK-EU deal is ‘sovereign choice’ and not a ‘one-way deal’
Industry minister Sarah Jones has said the new deal with the EU was a “sovereign choice” and not a “one-way deal”, despite widespread criticism that the government had appeared to make large concessions over fishing rights with the EU.
Appearing on Good Morning Britain, the MP for Croydon West told Richard Madeley and Susanna Reid that “It’s not a one-way deal at all because we will make a huge amount of money in terms of the exports that we can now.”
Claiming the deal had been welcomed by business, Jones said it didn’t mean the UK would have no say in rules that were set, telling viewers:
What will happen is we will have conversations about those rules. As you say, any kind of rule change has to go through a parliamentary process, and there will be an arbitration process where we can resolve any conflicts. I don’t foresee any conflicts, because we don’t want to reduce our standards.
And you know, the Tories, when they brought in [their] deal, said, you know, now we can diverge from the EU. That hasn’t happened, because we don’t want to reduce those standards.
Jones lamented the trading conditions that had been put in place by the Conservative Brexit deal with the EU, saying:
We have made a sovereign choice to do this because it is a practical, pragmatic response to the terrible situation we had where we couldn’t trade with our nearest trading partners. We couldn’t even trade at all on sausages or minced meat. This is much better. It will put more money in people’s pockets than be good for jobs.
Reeves eyes Gulf trade pact as UK government’s ‘next deal’

Julia Kollewe
Rachel Reeves said the UK government is closing in on a trade pact with six Gulf nations, including Qatar and Saudi Arabia, as its next major deal.
The chancellor told the BBC the agreement would be the government’s “next deal” as it looks to boost trade ties following Brexit.
Reeves suggested economic growth would be strengthened through recent trade deals with the United States, the EU and India, all inked within a fortnight.
Britain is in a better place than any other country in the world in terms of deals with those countries.
The first deal and the best deal so far with the US, we’ve got the best deal with the EU for any country outside the EU, and we’ve got the best trade agreement with India.
The chancellor also said the UK was “not looking to have trade negotiations with China”.
In early April, foreign secretary David Lammy said Labour was continuing discussions with the Gulf over a trade deal, which were started by the previous Conservative government.
Priti Patel: UK-EU is a betrayal of Brexit by ‘smug’ Keir Starmer
The shadow foreign secretary, Priti Patel, has said that the government’s deal with the EU is a betrayal of Brexit, and accused the prime minister of making “smug” comments when announcing it.
Speaking on the GB News channel, the Conservative MP for Witham said:
Keir Starmer never believed in Brexit. He spent all of his time campaigning to unpick Brexit. He was being dishonest with the British public. He basically did not go into the general election last year and say that his reset would mean that we’d become a rule taker all over again. He deceived the British public.
Asked about Starmer’s comment that the deal put the country back on the world stage, Patel said:
Quite frankly, that is utter rubbish from Keir Starmer. Not for the first time. It was Britain that led the international efforts when it came to Russia’s illegal invasion of Ukraine. So I think he needs to go away and do some homework.
And of course, it was Conservatives in government that led the way when it came to Britain post-Brexit, our place in the world, securing those trade deals, over 70 trade agreements during our tenure in government.
So, we’re not going to listen to that nonsense from Keir Starmer. He just constantly wants to betray Britain and the democratic vote of the British people. And I think he needs to really go back and recalibrate his very smug comments.
Industry minister: UK-EU deal does not mean the country is rejoining the EU
Any cost to taxpayers from the government’s deal with the EU will be outweighed by the economic benefits, industry minister Sarah Jones has said, insisting that the UK was not rejoining the EU.
Speaking on Sky News, she said:
We are not paying, through any of this, for access to markets. That is not what we are doing. We are not rejoining the EU. Where we will pay, and these things will be negotiated, where we will pay is where there are joint costs that need to be paid.
Welcome and opening summary …
Good morning, welcome to our live coverage of UK politics for Tuesday. Here are your headlines …
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Industry minister Sarah Jones has said the UK-EU deal announced yesterday by prime minister Keir Starmer and European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen does not mean that Britain is rejoining the EU. She claimed any cost to taxpayers would be outweighed by the economic benefits
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Shadow foreign secretary Priti Patel has said that “when Labour negotiates, Britain always seems to lose”, and accused the government of being misleading over the deal. She said the deal was a betrayal of Brexit
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Chancellor Rachel Reeves has said the government is nearing a trade pact with six Gulf nations, including Qatar and Saudi Arabia
It is Martin Belam with you today. Cabinet meets this morning. We might get a Commons statement from the prime minister later on, and the chancellor is expected to make a media appearance. You can reach me at [email protected].