00:00Brexit's never very far away from British politics.
00:03It's always there in the background.
00:04There's a drumbeat now, building Nana towards this summit
00:07between Sir Keir Starmer and Ursula von der Leyen next month.
00:11They met, didn't they, yesterday?
00:13You saw those clips. They got on very well.
00:15That's all about laying the ground.
00:17Now, this government tells us they won't do this triple lock on Brexit,
00:22they might call it.
00:23My words, not their words.
00:24But they don't want to get back to a freedom of movement
00:25or the customs union or the single market, those three things.
00:29But around the edges, there might be some changes,
00:33particularly on the issue of 18 to 30s.
00:35Should they be allowed freedom of movement going backwards and forwards
00:38really to help the hospitality industry
00:40and maybe some form of studying and tutoring?
00:44And what are the terms of that?
00:45Will young people have to pay their £600 a year to use the NHS,
00:49which is the NHS surcharge, or not?
00:52One in and one out, it looks like an idea which Yvette Cooper is quite keen on.
00:57She's very against anything which may swell the net migration figures.
01:01I can see you're shaking your head there, Nana.
01:03But the idea of one in, one out means there's a kind of revolving door.
01:07So as we take a young person from the European Union,
01:10we can send a Brit over there.
01:12And again, you're shaking your head.
01:13I can't even see how they're going to manage this.
01:18So how do you create a structure that enables one in, one out?
01:21How are you going to do that?
01:22They can't even manage people coming here via dinghy across the channel.
01:27They were processing people really slowly.
01:29How are they going to?
01:30Where's the manpower to process them one in, one out thing?
01:33I don't know yet.
01:35Thank you for asking the question.
01:36I'm not in government, but I don't know yet.
01:37I think they are nervous about the net migration figure that will come down,
01:41we're told by the prime minister, not to a figure which is anywhere below
01:44probably what happened in the past 10 years.
01:46It won't be as high as nearly a million who came in the last year.
01:50Today in Downing Street, the government has changed its tune on Brexit.
01:53I want to read to you what the spokesman has told us.
01:56He says this.
01:57This is not about returning to the EU, OK, but we will not be defined by the argument of the past.
02:03That is so important, I think.
02:05The PM has been clear about the benefits of a better relationship with the European Union,
02:09a better relationship that can unlock the benefits for Britain's British business.
02:13So clearly they want to get a lot closer on areas like phytosanitary and other trading areas involving food.
02:19And we heard overnight from Rachel Reeve speaking to the BBC.
02:22She suggested that the EU is arguably more important as a trading partner than the US.
02:28Now, number 10 wouldn't go there.
02:31They see it as a kind of false choice between two big trading partners.
02:35But I think Brexiteers worried about Brexit and what they believe Brexit is will be alarmed by this.
02:41But I think at the heart of it, the sovereignty issue, which is the core of Brexit, that's not changing.
02:45So, let's see.