- Michel Barnier clarifies UK’s options for rejoining the EU bloc
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Michel Barnier clarifies UK’s options for rejoining the EU bloc
Michel Barnier emphasised that the UK cannot “have its cake and eat it” regarding conditions for rejoining the EU single market, which includes respecting the four freedoms.
Clear conditions for the UK to engage with the EU single market hinge on respecting its four freedoms, influencing future economic relations and strategic alignment.
“Brexit decided by a sovereign vote 10 years ago is done, but the future is open, and the door is open,” said Michel Barnier.
EU’s door ‘is open to UK’, fomer Brexit negotiator Barnier tells EU News

Former European Union Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier told EU News that it is up to the United Kingdom to decide whether it would want to rejoin the bloc, but that Brussels has made its conditions clear.
His comments come ten years after the UK voted to leave the EU by 52% to 48%, and at a time when polling shows a clear majority of the British public, across party lines, views doing so as a mistake.
“Brexit decided by a sovereign vote 10 years ago is done, but the future is open, and the door is open,” Barnier, a prominent centre-right politician who was Prime Minister of France from September to December 2024, said on EU News’ programme 12 Minutes With.
He argued that the UK government and political parties know what the conditions for rejoining are, noting that it should be clear to London that it “cannot have its cake and eat it” when it comes to negotiating its future relationship with Brussels.
Barnier, who referred to Brexit as a lose-lose game, explained that it would, for example, be possible for the UK to join the single market — the bloc’s borderless economic area — without joining the EU, as Iceland, Liechtenstein, and Norway have done.
“But the conditions are very clear for any country joining the single market,” he said, adding that one of them would be “respecting the four freedoms” — free movement of goods, services, people and capital.
Becoming a full member of the single market, however, is currently seen as a non-starter.
Not joining the single market was a key “red line” for the Labour government under outgoing Prime Minister Keir Starmer. It was his way of sticking to his party’s pre-election manifesto pledges in a bid to appease Leave voters while navigating a “reset” with the EU.
Instead, Starmer’s approach was to take the UK further into the market in some sectors. However, this partial or “à la carte” arrangement has historically not been on the table for the EU. Barnier echoed that the UK should not be allowed to cherry-pick from EU policies.
It is unclear where Andy Burnham, who is currently an MP and the most likely candidate to replace Starmer in Number 10 following his resignation on Monday, stands on the matter.
Liberal Democrats and pro-EU Labour MPs have already urged him to “drop the red lines” on the single market and customs union, which Brussels sees as a key snag in the rapprochement efforts.
Rapid re-entry is possible
Barnier hinted at a possible fast-tracked process for the UK if the remaining alignment on regulation continues, eluding the long, complex, multi-phase accession process faced by candidate countries such as Ukraine, Moldova and Western Balkan states.
“The answer [to how long the process will take] is in the hands of the UK,” he said. “If from now to the time of new negotiations starting, the UK creates a huge divergence from the standards, the norms for food, for security, we will have a problem, and it will take time, much more time.”
He noted that, “if there is no divergence, no crucial divergence, it will be very rapid,” adding, “We can’t compare the very long process for new countries that want to access the EU and former member states.”
In the meantime, Barnier said, Brussels and London can work together on many fronts.
“We have a lot to do together, for instance, for defence, for security, for cooperation between the services, even for investment in artificial intelligence or new technologies that we are seeing,” he said.
He proposed to facilitate this type of cooperation between the UK and the EU through the creation of a new body, referring to “a kind of European Council for Defence and Security”, which would sit “alongside the current institutions”.
“This would be open to some countries that are no longer or not yet in the EU, for instance, obviously the UK, but also Norway or Ukraine.”
The UK and EU are in the midst of “reset talks” and were hoping to conclude talks on an agrifood agreement (slashing barriers by aligning sanitary and phytosanitary rules), an emissions trading deal, and a youth mobility scheme (granting special visas to young Europeans and Britons) at a summit on 22 July.
However, European Council President António Costa confirmed earlier this week that the meeting, for which a date was set only last week at the G7 summit in France, would be postponed in light of Starmer’s resignation.
‘Cheer up, you caught the bad guy,’ says killer Virginia McCullough as she is arrested for murdering her parents
A woman who murdered her parents “in cold blood” before hiding them in makeshift tombs for four years told officers to “cheer up, you caught the bad guy” as she was arrested in her home.
Virginia McCullough, 36, poisoned her father John McCullough, 70, with prescription medication and fatally stabbed her mother Lois McCullough, 71, shortly afterwards in 2019.
She ran up large debts on credit cards in her parents’ names and after their deaths, she continued to spend their pensions until she was finally caught in 2023.
In body-worn video footage released by police, a handcuffed – and eerily calm – McCullough told officers: “I did know that this would kind of come eventually.
“It’s proper that I serve my punishment.”
She said she had slipped something into her father’s drink then put his body under a bed on the ground floor, and put her mother’s body in an upstairs wardrobe.
McCullough, having been arrested on suspicion of double murder, told an officer: “Cheer up, at least you’ve caught the bad guy.”
She added: “I know I don’t seem 100% evil.”
At the police station, she told officers where a kitchen knife was, which she described as a “murder weapon”, and a hammer which she said “will still have blood on it”.
McCullough, of Pump Hill, Chelmsford, Essex, was sentenced to life imprisonment on Friday with a minimum term of 36 years at Chelmsford Crown Court, after she admitted to their murders between 17 and 20 June 2019 at an earlier hearing at the same court.
Chelmsford Crown Court heard how she hid their bodies in makeshift tombs at the family home in Great Baddow in Essex, then told persistent lies to cover her tracks.
The court heard she cancelled family arrangements and frequently told doctors and relatives her parents were unwell, on holiday or away on lengthy trips.
But concerns over Mr and Mrs McCullough’s welfare were raised in September 2023 by a GP at their registered practice, and Essex County Council’s safeguarding team referred these to police.
The GP had not seen the couple for some time and said Mr McCullough had failed to collect medication and attend scheduled appointments. It was found McCullough had frequently cancelled appointments, using a range of excuses to explain her father’s absence.
Police said a missing persons investigation was initially launched and McCullough lied to officers, claiming her parents were travelling and would be returning in October.
It became a murder investigation, and when officers forced entry to the house in Pump Hill on September 15 2023, McCullough confessed that her parents’ bodies were in the house and that she had killed them.
Nicola Rice, a specialist prosecutor for the Crown Prosecution Service, said: “McCullough callously and viciously killed both of her parents before concealing their bodies in makeshift tombs within their home address.
“She spent the next four years manipulating and lying to family members, medical staff, financial institutions, and the police, spending her parents’ money and accruing large debts in their name.”
She added: “This was a truly disturbing case, which has left behind it a trail of devastation, and I can only hope that the sentence passed today will help those who loved and cared for Lois and John begin to heal.”
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Defense alliance NATO chief Mark Rutte has met US President-elect Donald Trump to discuss global security issues, according to a NATO spokesperson.
The meeting took place in Palm Beach, Florida.
During his first term as US president, 2017-2020, Trump pushed for European NATO countries to spend more on defense and described the alliance’s cost-sharing as unfair to the US.
Rutte took over as NATO chief from Norwegian Jens Stoltenberg in November.
Before taking office in January, Trump has nominated Pete Hegseth for the post of defense secretary, which has raised eyebrows among many allies.
Hegseth, 44, has served as an infantry captain in Iraq and Afghanistan, but has no senior military or government officer experience.
Multiple missiles were fired in an airstrike towards a densely populated part of Lebanon’s capital early on Saturday.
The huge airstrike targeted Beirut’s Basta neighbourhood, and no prior warnings were given by the Israeli military. The largely residential area was struck last month.
At least one violent explosion was heard across the city, Reuters witnesses said, and plumes of smoke could be seen. Scenes of massive destruction at the site were shared online, including a massive crater in the ground.
“Beirut, the capital, woke up to a horrific massacre, as the Israeli enemy’s air force completely destroyed an eight-story residential building with five missiles on Al-Mamoun Street in Basta,” the state-run National News Agency reported.
The health ministry put the initial death toll at four, with 23 wounded. The number is expected to climb in the coming hours as search and rescue efforts continue.
It came after a long day of Israeli airstrikes on Beirut’s southern suburbs, which have been non-stop since last week.
The cross-border fighting between Israel and the Iran-backed Hezbollah militant group escalated into a full-blown war in mid-September.
Israel has bombed southern Lebanon, Beirut’s southern suburbs and the eastern Beqaa region, and has sent ground troops across the border. Hezbollah has continued to fire rockets deeper into Israel.
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