Lord Sugar has branded the Brexit the 'biggest disaster of my life' and insisted that the UK should beg to be returned to the EU.
On the eve of the fifth anniversary of leaving the block, the Business Mogul and Apprentice Star made the decision about the decision to crush economic growth.
He told BBC Breakfast that if he was PM, he 'on bent knees' would go to Brussels and ask to recover again.
The Brexit referendum in 2016 was followed by years of a fight about the conditions of the British departure.
Boris Johnson finally concluded a deal that allowed the divorce in the early 2020, just before the Covid pandemia insisted the whole world.
Lord Sugar has a Brexit brand the 'biggest disaster of my life' and insisted that the UK should beg to be back in the EU
A poll published this week suggested that only 30 percent now believe that the UK was right to leave the EU
A poll that was published this week suggested that only 30 percent now believe that the UK was right to leave the EU.
Immigration – generally considered an important reason for the leave voice – has since been transferred to new record highs.
Lord Sugar said: 'The full consequences that we are not in the EU are really starting to take his toll.
'If I were the PM, I would come to my bent knees and ask to be allowed in again.
'It is all to do with trade, free trade, small people, small traders cannot now send goods abroad … It is a terrible situation.
“How do we get out? My honest opinion – come back to the EU. '
Keir Starmer has made a 'reset' with the EU a core goal for the Labor government, although he has emphasized that the VK will not go back to a customs union or the internal market.
According to Yougov research that was conducted earlier this month, 55 percent of the British now think that Brexit was the wrong decision.
That position was shared by 18 percent of those who voted on leave – although 66 percent have their original choice.
About 7 percent of the previous remains were switched to say that it was good that the UK would leave, while 88 percent had not changed position.
Keir Starmer has made a 'reset' with the EU a core objective for the Labor Government, although he has emphasized that the UK will not go back to a customs union or the internal market
About 18 percent of those who voted on leave now think it was the wrong step – although 66 percent have their original choice