Quitting EU will make us less free – so vote on May 23
EU membership means we can live, love, work, do business and retire in 28 countries. If we don’t stop Brexit, we’ll lose those freedoms.
Common Market 2.0 looks just as bad after latest mutation
It isn’t fully specified. Parts are not deliverable. And if it ever came to pass, it would turn us into rule-takers on a massive scale.
Attorney general is wrong person pursuing the wrong policy
Geoffrey Cox is trying to apply a legal fix to a policy problem. The government has impaled itself on the contradictions of Brexit.
There are two forms of ‘Norway’ Brexit: honest and sneaky...
No patriot could back the honest form. And no honest politician could back the sneaky one.
Vassalage is the right word for May’s Brexit
The deal proposed by Theresa May will leave the UK as a rule-taker, not a rule-maker, for the foreseeable future.
Don’t believe Brexiters. These 5 Leave falsehoods show why
Brexiters’ latest ruse is that a Canada-style trade deal can save Brexit. This is as dishonest as their crumbling Leave campaign.
Gibraltar: Overseas and overlooked in Brexit debate
That nothing has been agreed on Gibraltar is troubling enough. The Rock’s potential future just beyond the EU’s frontier is even more so.
Don’t get hopes up… a la carte Brexit is still off table...
People are probably getting over-excited about Barnier’s positive remarks. When he and Raab sit down tomorrow, they’ll still be far apart.
Supply chain reaction to Brexit will see jobs leave UK
Deal or no deal, extra border checks will are bad news for UK-based manufacturers’ just-in-time supply chain models. Many could up sticks.
Chequers plan is dead. But what about son of Chequers?
Although EU has killed May’s original proposal, it has left wiggle room for a new version. Problem is any deal will be even more miserable.
The folly of sidelining UK services trade
Future UK trade deals will be undermined by the tactic of trying to separate goods and services exports in EU negotiations
May’s doublespeak could waste yet more precious time
PM says one thing to the Cabinet, another to our EU partners. They can, of course, all hear what is being said to the other.