Time for a national consensus on Brexit
Theresa May and the Conservatives promised stability but gave us chaos. They can’t be trusted with handling negotiations on their own.
Relying on the DUP is reckless gamble for May
Embracing Ulster loyalists at Westminster would limit her room for manoeuvre on Brexit and endanger the Northern Irish peace process.
Brexit Britain has long way to fall before it touches bottom
No-deal proponents such as Theresa May live in a la-la land in which problems of crashing out of EU are solved by wishful thinking.
EU officials uneasy as May’s snap election gambit goes awry...
Our partners had hoped poll would give PM a strong majority and room to compromise on Brexit.
How does Plaid Cymru affect anti-Brexit vote in Wales?
Welsh voters have an extra pro-European party to consider this election. Here’s our guide to how to vote where Plaid comes into play.
What do Brexiters and Lenin have in common?
Like Vladimir Ilyich, Brexiters label those who disagree with them as saboteurs and enemies of the people. This is profoundly undemocratic.
10 Tory cabinet ministers who deserve pro-European votes
Influential Remainers could be last line of defence if May tries to crash out with no deal. See our league table of the good, bad and ugly.
Where is the British Macron?
UK is crying out for centrist pro-European force to pull UK together and face 21st Century challenges. Labour and Lib Dems don’t fit bill.
What will Tory party look like after election?
Conservative HQ machinations suggest preference for pragmatic figures who will toe May’s line on Brexit - whatever that turns out to be.
Labour gets worst of all worlds on Brexit
Its confused policies are a gift horse to the Tories. Meanwhile, its weak pro-European credentials make it a sitting duck to the Lib Dems.
May has cheek to claim ‘strong and stable leadership’
PM promises stability over “coalition of chaos”. But current turmoil stems largely from her party’s policies and persistent infighting.
Political volatility can be exploited in Britain too
All over the world this is a time of political upheaval. So why in the UK is it assumed the victory of its oldest party is inevitable?