The UK is set to leave the EU in March next year, but many of the key issues remain unresolved and there is now perceived to be a very real prospect of the country leaving without a deal in place. For Helmut K Anheier, the answer is not a second referendum given another vote would do little to resolve the division that currently exists in the UK over Brexit. Rather, he proposes a moratorium on Brexit, lasting up to five years, which would allow both the UK and the EU to fully get to grips with the process
The latest edition of Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index was published on 21 ...
The UK is a net contributor to the EU budget. Following Brexit, the loss of UK contributions will th...
Is it time for the British Parliament to compromise and vote through Theresa May’s Brexit deal? Dimi...
The UK is set to leave the EU in March next year, but many of the key issues remain unresolved and t...
The agreement reached between the UK and the EU in December last year was billed as the final act in...
The Labour party was eventually persuaded to back a second referendum. This was a historic mistake w...
Theresa May's strategy of procrastination and ambiguity is about to run out, writes Jim Gallagher (U...
The convoluted saga of Brexit, from the referendum to the final departure of the UK from the EU, has...
Contrary to some predictions, Britain's economy has not crashed in the two years since the EU refere...
Last year, 15 Tory backbenchers brought about the government's first Commons defeat when they suppor...
The size of the 'divorce bill' the UK will pay following its exit from the EU remains one of the key...
Britain's recent General Election and its unanticipated outcome marks the latest chapter in the poli...
By October ministers hope to have negotiated a withdrawal agreement on the terms of the UK's departu...
Boris Johnson’s decision to merge the Department for International Development and the Foreign Offic...
The proposed new sifting committee for Statutory Instruments under the EU (Withdrawal) Bill will not...
The latest edition of Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index was published on 21 ...
The UK is a net contributor to the EU budget. Following Brexit, the loss of UK contributions will th...
Is it time for the British Parliament to compromise and vote through Theresa May’s Brexit deal? Dimi...
The UK is set to leave the EU in March next year, but many of the key issues remain unresolved and t...
The agreement reached between the UK and the EU in December last year was billed as the final act in...
The Labour party was eventually persuaded to back a second referendum. This was a historic mistake w...
Theresa May's strategy of procrastination and ambiguity is about to run out, writes Jim Gallagher (U...
The convoluted saga of Brexit, from the referendum to the final departure of the UK from the EU, has...
Contrary to some predictions, Britain's economy has not crashed in the two years since the EU refere...
Last year, 15 Tory backbenchers brought about the government's first Commons defeat when they suppor...
The size of the 'divorce bill' the UK will pay following its exit from the EU remains one of the key...
Britain's recent General Election and its unanticipated outcome marks the latest chapter in the poli...
By October ministers hope to have negotiated a withdrawal agreement on the terms of the UK's departu...
Boris Johnson’s decision to merge the Department for International Development and the Foreign Offic...
The proposed new sifting committee for Statutory Instruments under the EU (Withdrawal) Bill will not...
The latest edition of Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index was published on 21 ...
The UK is a net contributor to the EU budget. Following Brexit, the loss of UK contributions will th...
Is it time for the British Parliament to compromise and vote through Theresa May’s Brexit deal? Dimi...