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Closer alignment between a Labour government and the EU is a certainty. But the divisive binary choices of 2016 are ancient history.
What is the opposition’s thinking about Britain’s place in the world?
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.
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.
Fake it till you make it has been the guiding maxim of British government policy for national renewal since Brexit.
After Rishi Sunak’s spring statement, the party can no longer rely on the economy to bolster support, so old battle lines are being redrawn.
On trade, finance, migration, food standards and more, the UK suffers fresh ignominy on a daily basis.
Amid political quagmire, Starmer must kill false narrative about EU intransigence.
Some seem to believe that Labour should now “move on” and ignore Brexit, hoping it won’t be an issue anymore. They are wrong, for three reasons.
There are so many reasons not to back any agreement brought forward by the PM that it is hard to know where to start. So let’s look at the arguments being made by those who think they should.
Brexit is a Tory invention and pro-Europeans must still fight the prospect of EU exile, writes Will Hutton.
Our fundamental values of democracy, human rights and the rule of law are under direct threat. The next election has to produce a different outcome, and we'll get it by holding the prime minister accountable
The best way to stop Brexit is to support those parties which are unequivocal about staying in the European Union.