There has been little public detail of what that has meant beyond existing talks on single market treatment for the trade in food, farm products, electricity and emissions trading.
It has now emerged that UK officials suggested that the agenda for the next summit could be much more ambitious, with one option covering frictionless trade within a UK-EU single market for all goods.
A European Commission spokesperson declined to comment on the UK's proposal to the Guardian, which first reported the story, , externalbut said they "see scope to deepen" industrial defence cooperation, citing the UK's desire for talks on a Ukraine loan.
The government did not confirm the specifics of any conversations, but acknowledged that a range of options were put to the EU in recent months and conversations are ongoing.
British business groups have been briefed on the move and the EU's pushback that such an ambitious ask would not be negotiable with the government's existing red lines on, for example, freedom of movement.
Some ministers believe that significant recent changes in the US posture to Europe might lead to more flexible thinking in continental capitals about the opportunities of economic reintegration between the UK and EU.
In the recent King's Speech, the government announced a European Partnership Bill which will provide a method through which UK and EU law would be aligned in relevant sectors being negotiated, for example food trade. The government could also use this legal avenue to do the same in any other sector.
GreenGreasyGreasels on May 23rd, 2026 at 12:15 UTC »
UK always wanted this - a cherry picked single market subset taking what they like and skipping what they don't. But EU single market includes the full set - goods, services, capital and people. You take is all or you don't.
The fact that UK is still asking for bespoke deal means the still haven't internalized their lesson from the brexit breakup.
This is not going to go anywhere.
BlueEmma25 on May 23rd, 2026 at 11:21 UTC »
From yesterday's Financial Times: EU rejects UK push to create a single market for goods
MeatPiston on May 23rd, 2026 at 11:20 UTC »
What a novel idea. If only there was an existing international framework for European trade that Britain to enter. They could call the effort to join it Brentrance.