In a recent speech, the British Foreign Secretary and leading campaigner for Brexit Boris Johnson, made extensive reference to the work of John Stuart Mill. Johnson’s evocation of Mill is problematic on several levels, as is his apparently tenuous grasp of the workings of European and supra-national institutions. On the face of it, Johnson’s stated desire for “self-government of the people, by the people, for the people”[1] appears eminently reasonable. Upon closer inspection, however, the contradictions inherent in Johnson’s notion of liberalism readily become apparent
Since the Brexit referendum of 2016 a number of studies have found that Boris Johnson’s decision to ...
David Cameron’s renegotiation does not seem to have persuaded voters to switch to the Remain camp, w...
The election of Boris Johnson with a substantial parliamentary majority in December 2019 featured th...
In a recent speech, the British Foreign Secretary and leading campaigner for Brexit Boris Johnson, m...
One has to hand it to Boris Johnson, at the time of writing still the UK’s Prime Minister and if cur...
Boris Johnson, the Conservative Mayor of London and MP for Uxbridge, recently announced that he woul...
The election of Boris Johnson with a substantial parliamentary majority in December 2019 featured th...
Many British citizens want self-government again, as they had for hundreds of years before the ‘Comm...
Since the early hours of Tuesday 10th September, Parliament has been suspended (officially known as ...
Wednesday finally saw the publication of Boris Johnson’s proposals for an “alternative” to the EU’s ...
British politics has become a strange place. Politicians making pronouncements on issues, but polici...
On 10 November 2015, after months of veiled threats, Prime Minister David Cameron wrote a letter to ...
The Leave campaign’s understanding of “freedom” as the absence of external constraints is one-sided,...
Simon Glendinning writes on the English philosopher John Stuart Mill’s views on Europe. He notes tha...
‘[F]ree movement of people is one of the four essential freedoms. These four freedoms are indivisibl...
Since the Brexit referendum of 2016 a number of studies have found that Boris Johnson’s decision to ...
David Cameron’s renegotiation does not seem to have persuaded voters to switch to the Remain camp, w...
The election of Boris Johnson with a substantial parliamentary majority in December 2019 featured th...
In a recent speech, the British Foreign Secretary and leading campaigner for Brexit Boris Johnson, m...
One has to hand it to Boris Johnson, at the time of writing still the UK’s Prime Minister and if cur...
Boris Johnson, the Conservative Mayor of London and MP for Uxbridge, recently announced that he woul...
The election of Boris Johnson with a substantial parliamentary majority in December 2019 featured th...
Many British citizens want self-government again, as they had for hundreds of years before the ‘Comm...
Since the early hours of Tuesday 10th September, Parliament has been suspended (officially known as ...
Wednesday finally saw the publication of Boris Johnson’s proposals for an “alternative” to the EU’s ...
British politics has become a strange place. Politicians making pronouncements on issues, but polici...
On 10 November 2015, after months of veiled threats, Prime Minister David Cameron wrote a letter to ...
The Leave campaign’s understanding of “freedom” as the absence of external constraints is one-sided,...
Simon Glendinning writes on the English philosopher John Stuart Mill’s views on Europe. He notes tha...
‘[F]ree movement of people is one of the four essential freedoms. These four freedoms are indivisibl...
Since the Brexit referendum of 2016 a number of studies have found that Boris Johnson’s decision to ...
David Cameron’s renegotiation does not seem to have persuaded voters to switch to the Remain camp, w...
The election of Boris Johnson with a substantial parliamentary majority in December 2019 featured th...