Last week Vote Leave laid out its plans for a divorce and a future relationship with the EU. It argued that if voters decided to end UK’s membership of the EU, the UK would negotiate a “friendly deal” with European partners by the next general election in 2020. But this post-referendum roadmap does not hold water, argue Agata Gostyńska-Jakubowska and Adam Lazowski. It would, at best, further antagonise the European partners and, at worst, create economic and legal chaos. Here are four reasons why
Current public discussions about how the UK is to leave the European Union have been too simplified,...
Britain's efforts to leave the European Union are in trouble. At the press conference on 31 August a...
Ratification of the Withdrawal Agreement is by no means certain, raising the risk that the UK will c...
Most agree that leaving the EU would entail a negotiating period of at least two years, as set out i...
If Britain votes to Leave, how will the exit negotiations be conducted? Adam Lazowski warns that Don...
The British vote to leave takes the European Union into new legal and political territory. With appl...
How might the rest of the EU respond to a British vote to withdraw? Tim Oliver begins a series for L...
Introduction. With the dust barely settled on the Brexit referendum, a messy legal picture has emer...
Britain has voted for Brexit. What comes next is remarkably unclear. James Strong argues that four q...
Public discussions about how the UK is to exit from the European Union have been too simplified, and...
Theresa May, who is set to become UK Prime Minister on Wednesday, has made it clear that “Brexit mea...
The result of the Brexit referendum on 23 June 2016 came as a shock to many, including much of the p...
On the 23 June 2016 the UK voted in favour of Brexit, with the Leave campaign winning by 52% to 48%....
The negotiations on the Brexit withdrawal agreement are heading for the endgame: An agreement is to ...
One of the key issues of contention in the context of Brexit is the extent to which MPs and British ...
Current public discussions about how the UK is to leave the European Union have been too simplified,...
Britain's efforts to leave the European Union are in trouble. At the press conference on 31 August a...
Ratification of the Withdrawal Agreement is by no means certain, raising the risk that the UK will c...
Most agree that leaving the EU would entail a negotiating period of at least two years, as set out i...
If Britain votes to Leave, how will the exit negotiations be conducted? Adam Lazowski warns that Don...
The British vote to leave takes the European Union into new legal and political territory. With appl...
How might the rest of the EU respond to a British vote to withdraw? Tim Oliver begins a series for L...
Introduction. With the dust barely settled on the Brexit referendum, a messy legal picture has emer...
Britain has voted for Brexit. What comes next is remarkably unclear. James Strong argues that four q...
Public discussions about how the UK is to exit from the European Union have been too simplified, and...
Theresa May, who is set to become UK Prime Minister on Wednesday, has made it clear that “Brexit mea...
The result of the Brexit referendum on 23 June 2016 came as a shock to many, including much of the p...
On the 23 June 2016 the UK voted in favour of Brexit, with the Leave campaign winning by 52% to 48%....
The negotiations on the Brexit withdrawal agreement are heading for the endgame: An agreement is to ...
One of the key issues of contention in the context of Brexit is the extent to which MPs and British ...
Current public discussions about how the UK is to leave the European Union have been too simplified,...
Britain's efforts to leave the European Union are in trouble. At the press conference on 31 August a...
Ratification of the Withdrawal Agreement is by no means certain, raising the risk that the UK will c...