Here we go again. Once more a so-called “reset” with Brussels is being held up as the great prize — a shiny, bureaucratic carrot dangled in front of Labour's leadership. Keir Starmer and his cabinet of misfits, not one of whom has ever so much as run a business, want you to believe this is a kind of diplomatic resurrection. In reality, it is capitulation dressed up in a threadbare cardigan.
Let us be clear: the trade arrangement Britain already holds with the EU is the best deal any non-member country has ever secured. There is no chest of gold waiting to be seized from our friends across the Channel. What Labour is truly hunting for is not economic gain but ideological alignment — a slow, syrupy slide back into the grip of Brussels red tape and supranational control. More alignment. More regulation. Less Britain.
This is not strategy. It is surrender.
And the bill? More immigration, at a moment when the numbers are already smashing records. A tsunami, not a trickle.
As the brilliant Alex Phillips puts it: “The ‘Youth Mobility Scheme’ is not only free movement with an age limit, it's a green light to millions of migrants – largely young males from volatile states – who came to the continent over the last decade, to move to the UK. It's the long mooted Asylum Sharing Scheme by another name.”
She is right, and it should worry us all. The British people did not vote for Brexit to trade democratic control for open borders and overcrowded classrooms. They voted for sovereignty, for borders that actually mean something, and for a government that puts Britain and British citizens first.
Labour, for its part, is still flogging the worn-out fiction that every national ill traces back to Brexit. Nonsense.
Brexit threw open the door to the wider world, delivering trade deals with heavyweights including the US, Australia, India, Japan, the CPTPP bloc, and more than 70 other nations.
Brexit is not the problem. The problem is the policies cooked up after Brexit — driven by lefty lawyers, unelected bureaucrats, and the very political class that never believed in it in the first place.
Britain's crises are homegrown. They were forged by a left-liberal establishment that worships at the altar of Net Zero economic masochism, nods through dangerous Human Rights loopholes, and bends the knee to institutions bloated by Blair's meddling and utterly cut off from the people they were meant to serve.
The answer? Not more waffle. Not more resets. A Great Repeal.
That is precisely why Ben Habib and his Great British PAC are already at work, laying the groundwork for 2029, the year the patriotic coalition finally comes back to take our country back. Heading the legal charge is the formidable Martin Howe KC, who is spearheading the Great Repeal Programme: a bold, uncompromising blueprint to tear up the absurd laws holding us hostage, slash the red tape strangling enterprise, and put British interests first.

This is not a narrative. It is not optics. It is action. The public can tell the difference — they are miles ahead of the mandarins in Westminster. They want genuine change, not recycled spin.
Starmer, the accidental Prime Minister, will be remembered as the worst in modern history — not because he was radical, but because he was inert, intellectually unremarkable, and a hollow technocrat utterly devoid of conviction. He reached office only because the right was split, not because the country was won over.
2029 will be far more than an election. It will be a restoration — of British confidence, of British control, and of British common sense.
The Great British PAC is already building it. Roll on 2029.
Join the Great British PAC.
