The Chequers plan exposed the impossibility of Brexit. Current government proposals force the UK to adhere to the EU's rules, without any capacity to influence them. In consequence, Parliament and the UK public are edging closer to a People's Vote, writes Michael Cottakis (LSE)
Britons did not vote over what type of relationship or association the UK should have with the EU po...
Through its insistence on leaving the EU, the May government has created an immense, administrative ...
For an irreversible change like the break-up of the UK, a one-off bare majority vote is a flawed opt...
With the battle over Brexit returning to the House of Commons with the Internal Market Bill, it is e...
The results of the recent European Parliament elections demonstrate how the traditional model of UK ...
The convoluted saga of Brexit, from the referendum to the final departure of the UK from the EU, has...
Step by step, the UK government is shedding some of its illusions about Brexit, argues Holger Schmie...
Britain's recent General Election and its unanticipated outcome marks the latest chapter in the poli...
Although the Tories gained back votes from UKIP in 2017, their hard Brexit rhetoric also lost them v...
A large number of British citizens live elsewhere in Europe and many have the right to vote in UK el...
Negotiating with the EU was never going to be successful, because the EU's interest is in protecting...
Is it time for the British Parliament to compromise and vote through Theresa May’s Brexit deal? Dimi...
Luke Cooper and Sam Fowles write that contrary to received wisdom, Parliament does not have the powe...
Britain has made numerous mistakes over Brexit, but the European Union's record also needs to be ana...
Coverage of the Brexit negotiations often focuses on the relative bargaining power of the UK and the...
Britons did not vote over what type of relationship or association the UK should have with the EU po...
Through its insistence on leaving the EU, the May government has created an immense, administrative ...
For an irreversible change like the break-up of the UK, a one-off bare majority vote is a flawed opt...
With the battle over Brexit returning to the House of Commons with the Internal Market Bill, it is e...
The results of the recent European Parliament elections demonstrate how the traditional model of UK ...
The convoluted saga of Brexit, from the referendum to the final departure of the UK from the EU, has...
Step by step, the UK government is shedding some of its illusions about Brexit, argues Holger Schmie...
Britain's recent General Election and its unanticipated outcome marks the latest chapter in the poli...
Although the Tories gained back votes from UKIP in 2017, their hard Brexit rhetoric also lost them v...
A large number of British citizens live elsewhere in Europe and many have the right to vote in UK el...
Negotiating with the EU was never going to be successful, because the EU's interest is in protecting...
Is it time for the British Parliament to compromise and vote through Theresa May’s Brexit deal? Dimi...
Luke Cooper and Sam Fowles write that contrary to received wisdom, Parliament does not have the powe...
Britain has made numerous mistakes over Brexit, but the European Union's record also needs to be ana...
Coverage of the Brexit negotiations often focuses on the relative bargaining power of the UK and the...
Britons did not vote over what type of relationship or association the UK should have with the EU po...
Through its insistence on leaving the EU, the May government has created an immense, administrative ...
For an irreversible change like the break-up of the UK, a one-off bare majority vote is a flawed opt...