The UK government is expected to publish a draft bill on 28 May outlining a framework for the country’s referendum on EU membership. Andrew Glencross writes that UK politics is now increasingly defined by two different kinds of ‘exceptionalism’: a push within the UK for self-government outside of the EU, and Scottish demands for self-government within the UK. He argues that while neither the breakup of the UK nor a Brexit is inevitable, if they do occur it will be because of misplaced belief in the nostrum of self-government
Britain’s vote to leave the EU was supposed to help settle Britain’s ‘European Question’ – Tim Olive...
The UK coalition government’s recent policy towards Europe has had the effect of driving the country...
The UK’s referendum on EU membership may well be one of the main stories of 2016, with the British P...
One of the key issues in relation to the UK’s referendum is the extent to which EU membership underm...
How effective would a referendum on Britain’s EU membership be at settling the issue long-term? Andr...
With the UK going to the polls on Thursday, it is still far from certain which party will emerge wit...
Many British citizens want self-government again, as they had for hundreds of years before the ‘Comm...
It is a paradox that the United Kingdom, which on the one hand has recently joined the larger Europe...
In June 2016, the United Kingdom’s electorate voted in a referendum to leave the European Union. Thi...
That the UK is in the midst of an ongoing constitutional crisis can no longer be doubted, with quest...
Decision-makers in Scotland and Wales await the outcome of the UK’s EU referendum with trepidation. ...
Britain is now isolated as the only EU country to walk away from negotiations to rework the Lisbon t...
In his final post about the UK’s renegotiation strategies, Frank Vibert argues that the climate of p...
A string of moves by the Tory party: withdrawal of British Conservative MEPs from the EPP-ED caucus,...
Britain’s EU membership has been a key issue in the UK’s general election campaign, with David Camer...
Britain’s vote to leave the EU was supposed to help settle Britain’s ‘European Question’ – Tim Olive...
The UK coalition government’s recent policy towards Europe has had the effect of driving the country...
The UK’s referendum on EU membership may well be one of the main stories of 2016, with the British P...
One of the key issues in relation to the UK’s referendum is the extent to which EU membership underm...
How effective would a referendum on Britain’s EU membership be at settling the issue long-term? Andr...
With the UK going to the polls on Thursday, it is still far from certain which party will emerge wit...
Many British citizens want self-government again, as they had for hundreds of years before the ‘Comm...
It is a paradox that the United Kingdom, which on the one hand has recently joined the larger Europe...
In June 2016, the United Kingdom’s electorate voted in a referendum to leave the European Union. Thi...
That the UK is in the midst of an ongoing constitutional crisis can no longer be doubted, with quest...
Decision-makers in Scotland and Wales await the outcome of the UK’s EU referendum with trepidation. ...
Britain is now isolated as the only EU country to walk away from negotiations to rework the Lisbon t...
In his final post about the UK’s renegotiation strategies, Frank Vibert argues that the climate of p...
A string of moves by the Tory party: withdrawal of British Conservative MEPs from the EPP-ED caucus,...
Britain’s EU membership has been a key issue in the UK’s general election campaign, with David Camer...
Britain’s vote to leave the EU was supposed to help settle Britain’s ‘European Question’ – Tim Olive...
The UK coalition government’s recent policy towards Europe has had the effect of driving the country...
The UK’s referendum on EU membership may well be one of the main stories of 2016, with the British P...