Historians will be generally unkind to Theresa May. Indeed, they have already begun to be so. In his lengthy, well-informed account of May’s premiership, Anthony Seldon writes: “Her Brexit declarations were a slate of amateur contradictions”.1 Poorly advised, not only did she not know what she meant in insisting that “Brexit means Brexit” and “no deal is better than a bad deal”, but she had no idea whether her bid for a bespoke arrangement with the European Union (EU) was remotely possible
Following the June European Council, Andrew Duff reviews the state of play in the Article 50 negotia...
At least as far as the British side were concerned, the Brexit process had been stagnating ever sinc...
At the European Council of 9-10 March, Theresa May will, In all likelihood, at last invoke Article 5...
Historians will be generally unkind to Theresa May. Indeed, they have already begun to be so. In his...
In dogged pursuit of her deal, Theresa May continues to try to win over some Brexiteer MPs to ratify...
Ratification of the Withdrawal Agreement is by no means certain, raising the risk that the UK will c...
The agreement reached by the British cabinet at Chequers is decisive for Brexit. The subsequent Whit...
Andrew Duff assesses the domestic political situation in Britain after the Brexit- dominated party p...
Easter provided only a brief respite from Brexit. The crisis now continues, with escalating chaos in...
Now that Article 50 has officially been triggered, the process of untangling the UK from the Europea...
On 10 November 2015, after months of veiled threats, Prime Minister David Cameron wrote a letter to ...
Theresa May has stated that the UK will trigger Article 50 before the end of March 2017. Iain Begg w...
On 15 January the House of Commons rejected the European Union’s offer of an orderly Brexit by an as...
Over the years, the rest of the European Union has got very used to being lectured at by British pri...
The Article 50 secession treaty must be accompanied by a Political Declaration outlining the framewo...
Following the June European Council, Andrew Duff reviews the state of play in the Article 50 negotia...
At least as far as the British side were concerned, the Brexit process had been stagnating ever sinc...
At the European Council of 9-10 March, Theresa May will, In all likelihood, at last invoke Article 5...
Historians will be generally unkind to Theresa May. Indeed, they have already begun to be so. In his...
In dogged pursuit of her deal, Theresa May continues to try to win over some Brexiteer MPs to ratify...
Ratification of the Withdrawal Agreement is by no means certain, raising the risk that the UK will c...
The agreement reached by the British cabinet at Chequers is decisive for Brexit. The subsequent Whit...
Andrew Duff assesses the domestic political situation in Britain after the Brexit- dominated party p...
Easter provided only a brief respite from Brexit. The crisis now continues, with escalating chaos in...
Now that Article 50 has officially been triggered, the process of untangling the UK from the Europea...
On 10 November 2015, after months of veiled threats, Prime Minister David Cameron wrote a letter to ...
Theresa May has stated that the UK will trigger Article 50 before the end of March 2017. Iain Begg w...
On 15 January the House of Commons rejected the European Union’s offer of an orderly Brexit by an as...
Over the years, the rest of the European Union has got very used to being lectured at by British pri...
The Article 50 secession treaty must be accompanied by a Political Declaration outlining the framewo...
Following the June European Council, Andrew Duff reviews the state of play in the Article 50 negotia...
At least as far as the British side were concerned, the Brexit process had been stagnating ever sinc...
At the European Council of 9-10 March, Theresa May will, In all likelihood, at last invoke Article 5...