HomeThemesTypesDBAbout
Showing: ◈ opinion×◈ Jeremy Hunt×
Brexit was always going to be a recipe for the long-term decline of London as a financial centre Any ideas that suggested otherwise were ludicrous.
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?
Brexit's the elephant in the room that can be avoided no longer when quitting the European Union plunges a Disunited United Kingdom deeper into economic horror.
Brexit denialist-in-chief Jacob Rees-Mogg is still in full flow. He denies that any harm has come from Brexit – even though he can’t find any benefits.
Everyone can see that it is failing, but pretending it can work is a precondition for positions of authority.
We are stuck in the Tory game of make-believe that everything is coming up roses in an English country garden. The reality is that following Brexit the rest of the world looks at England with a mixture of perplexity, pity, and amused contempt.
Jeremy Hunt’s comments show how far we are from a rational debate about the economic consequences of leaving the EU.
No Conservative will dare admit the searingly obvious: Brexit is proving a catastrophe for Britain.
The next, Brexit-induced recession will be most painful for poorer households, who are also those that voted Leave in greatest numbers.
The foreign secretary flew at our expense to lie to young students in Japan, in order to appeal to old Tories at home.