Retaining influence in Europe after Brexit
In this session, speakers explored how the UK must adapt the ways it engages the EU and why failing to do so could damage its interests.
In 2016, the-then foreign secretary Boris Johnson said “while the UK is leaving the EU, it is not leaving Europe”. The UK and the EU will still need to deal with shared problems such as climate change and terrorism. The UK will also want to shape EU rules on data and health and safety standards that will continue to affect it after Brexit.
But the UK will find it much harder to do so once it is no longer ‘in the room’. In this session, speakers explored how the UK must adapt the ways it engages the EU and why failing to do so could damage its long-term interests.
Our panel:
- Nicole Sykes, head of EU negotiations at the Confederation of British Industry
- Joe Owen, programme director at the Institute for Government
- Georgina Wright, senior researcher at the Institute for Government
- Alex Stojanovic, researcher at the Institute for Government.
The event was chaired by Jill Rutter, senior fellow at the Institute for Government.
There was an opportunity for questions from the audience.
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Venue: Institute for Government, 2 Carlton Gardens, London, SW1Y 5AA
- Topic
- Brexit
- Keywords
- Foreign affairs Withdrawal Agreement
- Country (international)
- European Union
- Administration
- Johnson government
- Publisher
- Institute for Government