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Rightly, a central tenet of British foreign policy has long been to abide – and to expect others to abide – by international law.
Deep within the Northern Ireland protocol bill, ministers are making a sinister grab for yet more unchecked powers.
Not before time, Boris Johnson has resigned as leader of the UK’s Conservative Party. The Guardian reports that Johnson’s leadership “toppled under a wave of sleaze allegations and failure to tell the truth.” But his real scandal lies elsewhere — with Brexit.
Boris Johnson’s plans to shred the Northern Ireland protocol have no basis in law, economics or diplomacy.
Downing Street has briefed the media that the British government is planning legislation purporting to give the UK the power to renege on the legally-binding Northern Ireland Brexit protocol.
Prime minister personifies British hostility to international democratic norms.
It has not even been five months since the end of the Brexit transition period and there have been armed patrol vessels in the Channel.
EU must continue to monitor and ensure that the British hold up their side of the bargain.
Ministers have undermined Britain’s hard-earned reputation abroad by riding roughshod over conventions and the law
My former Conservative colleagues: ask yourselves what Boris Johnson has achieved, and heed the damning answer
The Prime Minister is now telling us is that his flagship achievement, the deal he told us was a triumph, the deal he said was oven-ready, is actually completely half-baked
The government – led by Boris Johnson – needs to rethink its approach and put the national interest above Brexit ideology
The UK Government's recent statements make a deal between the EU and UK less likely, regardless of whether that is the intent or not.
Trump’s national security adviser wants the UK to be beholden to the US for its daily bread, making the country a timid American outpost.