Sir Sadiq Khan has called for Labour to go into the next general election promising to rejoin the EU.

The mayor of London has also said the government should rejoin the customs union and single market before the next general election, expected in 2029.

Downing Street has repeatedly said the government will not join either the customs union or single market.

The Conservatives said the outspoken mayor's remarks pointed to Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer being "in office but not in power".

In an interview with Italian newspaper la Repubblica, Sir Sadiq said rejoining the bloc is "inevitable" and suggested - but did not say explicitly - that the UK could rejoin without another referendum.

"I see on a daily basis the damage Brexit has done to not just London, but Londoners, the damage economically, socially and culturally," he said, adding that US tariffs and the war in Iran have worsened the cost of living.

"I think it's inevitable, the direction of travel at some stage we're going to rejoin the European Union. "

Sir Sadiq also backed a rethink on parts of the government's planned asylum crackdown, which is coming under growing pressure from some Labour MPs.

On Tuesday, Angela Rayner warned proposals to make it harder for migrants already in the UK to settle permanently were "un-British" and a "breach of trust".

The London mayor said: "We want people, if they come here, to properly contribute, to integrate and get involved.

I would hope that the Labour government would listen to myself, Angela Rayner, Andy Burnham and many others who have expressed concerns. "

On the possibility of rejoining the EU, a Reform UK spokesman said: "After the next election, Reform will reverse any attempt to drag us back into the single market and customs union. "

But Green Party leader Zack Polanski believes Brexit has been "a disaster socially, culturally, economically" and in a speech earlier on Wednesday said: "One day I do want to see us rejoin. "

He added: "Nigel Farage has chutzpah to return to the stage and say 'things are disastrous, and I'm the person to fix it'. "

In a speech at King's College London on Wednesday evening, former Conservative Prime Minister Sir John Major said Brexit had "failed to deliver its many promises" and was causing an annual loss of "£100 billion of European trade and £40 billion of tax revenue".

Sir John said Brexit was "doing enormous damage to the lives and livelihoods of the British people – and their future" and had "left the UK more solitary and vulnerable"

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