While Starmer said at a press conference with the German chancellor that the UK did not have plans to join the EU's youth mobility scheme, with No 10 having previously ruled out such a move, speaking to reporters later, he pointedly did not reject the idea of setting up some kind of system for other link-ups - for example, student exchanges.
Starmer said after the press conference that nothing of this sort had been discussed during his meeting with Scholz at the federal chancellery in Berlin, as the focus was on bilateral ties rather than wider European links.
But he added: "We want a close relationship, of course, and I do think that can extend across defence, security, education and cultural exchange and, of course, trade." Asked to explicitly rule out any youth mobility scheme, under which young people from within the EU could live, work and study for a limited period in Britain, with reciprocal rights for young Britons, Starmer did not, pointing to the UK-Germany treaty he and Scholz had discussed.
Bu hikaye The Guardian dergisinin August 29, 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye The Guardian dergisinin August 29, 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
City win 'will clear minds and souls,' says Guardiola
Pep Guardiola has said Manchester City's return to winning ways will \"clear our minds and souls\" as he insisted the Premier League champions will get back to their best after a welcome 2-0 victory at Leicester.
Haaland's bundle of joy gives Guardiola timely lift
It was not without the kind of faults that have become the norm of late, but Pep Guardiola finally rebooted his winning Manchester City machine in his 500th match in charge.
Liverpool's high five Slot shrugs off transfer talk as Reds go eight points clear
Arne Slot has said the January transfer window will not become a distraction from Liverpool's fine run of form or cause a loss of control in his relationship with his players.
Salah stars again as Liverpool rout hapless Hammers
With 54 minutes gone at London Stadium, Trent Alexander-Arnold took a pass from Ryan Gravenberch with time to wait and look up, the lack of pressure from the West Ham players almost a public snub, before spanking a deflected shot past Alphonse Areola to make it 4-0 to Liverpool and kill off once again a game that was already long since dead.
Eze seals comeback to leave Saints stranded
When Aaron Ramsdale swapped warming the bench at Arsenal for a relegation battle with Southampton, even the England goalkeeper couldn't have imagined it would be this bad.
Gibbs-White profits off 'farcical' Everton as Forest go second
Nottingham Forest continue their remarkable ascent under Nuno Espirito Santo. A club that was one place above the relegation zone when Nuno arrived 12 months ago climbed to second in the Premier League with a comfortable win against Everton.
Strand Larsen's late strike piles pain on Postecoglou
For Tottenham, a home game against relegation-threatened opposition ought to mean only one thing. Instead, there was a sense of foreboding before and during plenty of this one.
Iraola delighted by 'perfect' Ouattara strike
Andoni Iraola lauded Dango Ouattara's impact off the bench as he came on to score an 89th-minute equaliser in Bournemouth's draw with Fulham.
Wilder defiant after Grant levels and Blades falter again
When does a stutter become a stumble? After a first home defeat of the season against Burnley on Boxing Day, the Championship high-flyers Sheffield United dropped two more home points against managerless West Brom.
'Staying was easy. Manchester just feels like home'
Kerstin Casparij on her new City contract, Gareth Taylor's obsessive levels of detail and her excitement for Euro 2025