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I negotiated the EU’s expansion. Here are the mistakes the UK must avoid repeating.
The latest opinion piece from the British Meat Processors Association (BMPA) notes postponing import checks from the EU leaves UK meat exporters at a significant disadvantage.
Opinion: a new post-Brexit debate about Irish unity could take in a radically different vision of a unified and reconciled island.
Fabio Petito argues that the UK is failing to realise the importance of regional blocks and has few realistic responses to the current crisis of the liberal international order.
The Prime Minister's poor post-Brexit trade deals show the desperation of a charlatan who sold the country a pup, writes Kevin Maguire.
The reality is that government resources will be tied up on Brexit for the foreseeable future. Brexit will not be done on January 31 2020
While the government throws money at Brexit, they are saddling the next generation with a triple whammy of social and economic costs of automation, climate change and trade disadvantage, writes Faiza Shaheen
Guest columnist Anila Baig reflects on the big lie that tipped us out of the European Union - with disastrous result. Boris Johnson promised an 'oven-ready' deal but now we're facing the consequences.
It is not always a source of celebration to be proved right.
The reality of Brexit is starting to hit us all - and even those who voted to leave the EU are getting upset.
Why on earth is our government refusing to adopt what appears to be the most sensible piece of EU law I’ve heard of in a long time?
Paul Routledge on the everyday nightmare that Brexit is fast becoming, and now with EU business decreasing sharply, what's next for the Tories - aka the Brexit Party?
Supporters of the European Convention on Human Rights must seize the moment and confront right-wing propaganda demanding the UK leaves it now - or risk a Brexit-style disaster, argues Kevin Maguire.
From up above, it resembles a sports stadium, void of spectators or athletes. Or a motorway service station, similarly vacant without a car or a lorry in plain sight.
Saturday 20 February was the 50th day since Boris Johnson’s Trade and Cooperation Agreement (TCA) came into effect. Anyone expecting it to settle all questions, or even most of the details, of how we will do business with the EU from now on will be mightily disappointed.
As we pass 60 days of Brexit entering the final month of the first quarter of 2021, let’s take a deeper look at the impact of Brexit on UK businesses and especially e-commerce businesses. Before authoring this article, I had numerous conversations with independent e-commerce business founders. I have based this article on those discussions to bring forward first-hand experiences.
The Irish News view: NIO minister Steve Baker is wrong to say basis of unity vote should change
Single market perks are no conjuring trick, but the result of years of EU legislation.
Boris Johnson is poised to become prime minister thanks to a small, unrepresentative population of Brexiteer voters bent on destruction.
An army of civil servants has been engaged to hide the terrible truth for as long as possible.
It’s tragic how little the British public was informed about the benefits of free movement, or of the variety of things they would stand to lose upon Britain’s departure from the EU.
Children in care born to EU parents face complex barriers to remaining in the UK.
Without free trade with the EU, British health services are set to face grave challenges throughout the second wave of coronavirus and beyond.
The European Union has a long history of dragging the UK kicking and screaming towards gender equality. Without it, British women will get left behind.