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An anti-Brexit protester in London. A recent YouGov poll found 63 per cent think the government is handling the issue of Brexit badly. Photo: AP

UK’s Rishi Sunak hails Brexit as ‘huge opportunity’, 3 years on

  • Tuesday marks the third anniversary of the UK’s withdrawal from the European Union
  • Recent polling suggests growing unhappiness in Britain with the way Brexit turned out
Britain

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak defended Brexit, insisting that leaving the EU had brought significant achievements and offered a “huge opportunity”, three years after the withdrawal agreement entered force.

“In the three years since leaving the EU, we’ve made huge strides in harnessing the freedoms unlocked by Brexit to tackle generational challenges,” Sunak said in a statement ahead of Tuesday’s three-year anniversary since the country formally left the EU.

He said Brexit was a “huge opportunity to deliver” on his priorities on growth, employment and social mobility.

The prime minister – who will also mark 100 days in office this week – said the UK had “forged a path as an independent nation with confidence” and “that momentum hasn’t slowed”.

He said this included Europe’s fastest vaccine roll-out, trade deals with 70 countries and “taking back control of our borders”.

The statement came as Sunak faces numerous challenges, with thousands of UK workers launching waves of strike action over pay outpaced by soaring inflation as the cost-of-living crisis hits millions.

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Sunak did not mention the problems in Northern Ireland surrounding post-Brexit trading agreements that have led to months of negotiations between London and Brussels.

A YouGov poll last week found 63 per cent think the government is handling the issue of Brexit badly.

Another poll published by Ipsos on Monday found 45 per cent thought Brexit was going worse than they expected, up sharply from 28 per cent in June 2021, including just over one in four (26 per cent) of those who voted Leave in the 2016 referendum.

Fewer than one in 10 (9 per cent) – down six points on 2021 – said it was working out better than expected, while nearly two in five (39 per cent) said it was meeting their expectations, a seven-point drop.

Britain’s Prime Minister Rishi Sunak will mark 100 days in office this week. Photo: AP

Ipsos interviewed 1,000 British adults aged 18-75 online on January 25 and 26.

In a jargon-heavy statement, Sunak said progress had been made in “a range of key growth areas”.

He cited economic reforms including the opening of free ports that exist outside normal tax and customs territory, as well as regulatory reforms to the financial sector.

British workers are striking as UK rights come under scrutiny

Sunak also included a bill going through parliament to scrap all the EU laws automatically retained post-Brexit and a new system of subsidies to business without “unnecessary EU bureaucracy”.

The UK is still pushing for association with the EU’s Horizon Europe scientific research exchange programmes, Sunak added, but is “working hard on developing a domestic alternative”.

Britain has complained of being excluded in breach of the post-Brexit deal from the flagship programme that funds research, nuclear regulator Euratom and the Copernicus satellite monitoring group.

Additional reporting by dpa

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