Britain and Germany are failing to learn from each other’s mistakes
Wes Streeting wants to take Britain back towards the European Union. Or at least closer to it – close enough to feel the warmth without quite committing. Brussels, naturally, is delighted. Here, at last, is a senior British minister who speaks the language of regulatory alignment and single-market adjacency. The grown-ups, they believe, are back. Finally an antidote to Nigel Farage and Rupert Lowe, they must be thinking. The current chaos in Britain should serve as a warning for Germany But Streeting's charm offensive rests on a assumption so fragile it barely survives contact with reality: that parties like Reform UK can be defeated through economic growth and better public services. Make people richer, the theory goes, and they will stop voting for Nigel Farage.