Among the groups campaigning against a hard Brexit, Open Britain is among the best-resourced. But their impact on public opinion and the government’s negotiating stance has so far been minimal. LSE Brexit co-editor Ros Taylor asked the chair of Open Britain, Roland Rudd, about the campaign’s strategy
In the never-ending saga that Brexit has become, there is still much speculation as to what will hap...
What do the public in East Anglia, where both Leave (in rural Lincolnshire) and Remain (in Cambridge...
Three related challenges await the new Prime Minister as he or she responds to last week’s referendu...
News yesterday of the Parliament’s Public Accounts Committee’s damning verdict on the Government’s h...
The UK economy has been resilient so far, but faces challenges that a falling exchange rate and mone...
Our project talks about Brexit, the United Kingdom’s exit from the European Union. Brexit was a hot ...
Despite disparate attempts in both Conservative and Labour circles to get ‘beyond Brexit’, last week...
Chequers has done nothing to resolve the underlying dilemma in the Brexit negotiations: the closer t...
We’re now over two months on from the election and, as expected, for many people Brexit’s importance...
Understandably we have heard little recently from Remainers or the second referendum brigade. As the...
Andrew Duff assesses the domestic political situation in Britain after the Brexit- dominated party p...
As 2016 draws to a close, the Commons has voted to trigger Article 50 in March 2017, Britain and the...
In this paper, I focus on the British future from Brexit. The institutional form this will take is n...
For those readers wondering what Nicholas Barr, who wrote our very popular Letter to friends, is thi...
Brexiters won the referendum over a week ago. Yet due to their lack of preparation and direction, it...
In the never-ending saga that Brexit has become, there is still much speculation as to what will hap...
What do the public in East Anglia, where both Leave (in rural Lincolnshire) and Remain (in Cambridge...
Three related challenges await the new Prime Minister as he or she responds to last week’s referendu...
News yesterday of the Parliament’s Public Accounts Committee’s damning verdict on the Government’s h...
The UK economy has been resilient so far, but faces challenges that a falling exchange rate and mone...
Our project talks about Brexit, the United Kingdom’s exit from the European Union. Brexit was a hot ...
Despite disparate attempts in both Conservative and Labour circles to get ‘beyond Brexit’, last week...
Chequers has done nothing to resolve the underlying dilemma in the Brexit negotiations: the closer t...
We’re now over two months on from the election and, as expected, for many people Brexit’s importance...
Understandably we have heard little recently from Remainers or the second referendum brigade. As the...
Andrew Duff assesses the domestic political situation in Britain after the Brexit- dominated party p...
As 2016 draws to a close, the Commons has voted to trigger Article 50 in March 2017, Britain and the...
In this paper, I focus on the British future from Brexit. The institutional form this will take is n...
For those readers wondering what Nicholas Barr, who wrote our very popular Letter to friends, is thi...
Brexiters won the referendum over a week ago. Yet due to their lack of preparation and direction, it...
In the never-ending saga that Brexit has become, there is still much speculation as to what will hap...
What do the public in East Anglia, where both Leave (in rural Lincolnshire) and Remain (in Cambridge...
Three related challenges await the new Prime Minister as he or she responds to last week’s referendu...