Nigel Farage will be accused of wanting to "take Britain backwards" by vowing to scrap trade agreements between the UK and EU, as the government seeks a permanent deal to cut checks on food and drink.

The Reform leader wants to ditch the prime minister's Brexit reset package, unveiled earlier this year, which covers areas including fishing, defence, a youth experience scheme, and passport e-gates.

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It also includes a temporary deal to reduce the red tape on imports and exports of some fruit and veg, meaning no border checks or fees are paid - and the government wants to make it permanent when it expires in 2027.

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Is the UK-EU deal really that good?

The minister tasked by Sir Keir

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