HomeThemesTypesDBAbout
Showing: ◈ Arlene Foster×
As part of our special edition looking at five years since the EU referendum, Alastair Campbell looks at the silence of the Leavers.
Assembly hears of plans for customs posts at NI ports, setting the cat among the pigeons.
First Minister Arlene Foster has called on Defence Secretary Ben Wallace to act.
The increasingly shrill nature of the rhetoric around Brexit is a worrying development that has the potential to do as much damage to Irish-British relations in the longer term as the practical consequences of the process itself.
Boris Johnson thinks he’s got a deal. Arlene Foster isn’t so sure. Nobody knows what’s in the deal – but some of the ERG think it’ll pass the Commons anyway. The Remainiacs team gather to work out what we know, what we don’t know… and what we think will be put before Parliament on Saturday.
Preserving post-Brexit trading rules for goods moving between Great Britain and Northern Ireland is "the only way" to avoid a hard border, warns the EU.
Northern political leaders face major challenge after striking deal.
Northern Ireland’s First Minister Arlene Foster laid out her plan to quit, sparking further upheaval at a time when London and Dublin are seeking to calm tensions in the region.
Lords committee warns uncertainty over trading rules may add to economic damage of crisis.
A Northern Ireland minister has threatened legal action against the UK and the EU over post-Brexit trading arrangements.
The government is facing fresh criticism over the Northern Ireland Protocol amid warnings it obstructs the "free movement" of the military.
“Those who championed Brexit and are crying salty tears now because of the consequences of Brexit need to accept that those are consequences of their decisions, their actions, and to not point the finger at others.”
Simon Coveney says British prime minister’s Commons statements ‘very unhelpful’.
EU gives go-ahead to weekend meetings after PM appears to backtrack on customs stance.
DUP says deal will put a border down the Irish sea and threaten the union with Britain.
The prime minister has imperilled peace in Northern Ireland, and every day the economic fallout worsens.
Arlene Foster tells incoming prime minister the £1bn-plus confidence and supply agreement must be renewed ‘over the coming weeks’.
Party leadership urges Boris Johnson to trigger Article 16.
Ireland’s foreign minister dismisses request by DUP in escalating row over trade barriers in Irish Sea.
Downing Street has said the post-Brexit Northern Ireland Protocol cannot continue in its current form and that it should be “urgently” changed.
Which way do the political winds blow in Northern Ireland? The centennial of the decision to remain in the United Kingdom has been overshadowed by the infighting within the Democratic Unionist Party of the now outgoing First Minister Arlene Foster, pushed out by her own rank and file. We ask if that signals a further tack to the right for the Christian fundamentalist, pro-Brexit DUP...
On 7 October last year, there was a defining phone call between Boris Johnson and Angel Merkel.
Episode one watches as the Europeans’ respect for a formidable negotiating opponent turns into frustration and incredulity as the British fail to present a united front. At moments funny and tragic, it ends with the debacle in December 2017 when Theresa May flies in to Brussels to finalise details of a deal and is publically humiliated by her coalition partner.
Dogmatic obsession means that Johnson won’t lift a finger to help Northern Ireland.