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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.
A year on from leaving the EU, it’s time for an annual report on how Brexit has worked out for Wales.
Dogmatic obsession means that Johnson won’t lift a finger to help Northern Ireland.
The prime minister seeks to game and inflame a state of mind that rejects complex reality in favour of symbols and fantasy.
Northern Ireland’s first minister has paid the price for believing the promises of the hard Brexiteers.
IT should give nobody any satisfaction to say of the current deeply troubling disorder in Northern Ireland that it was, alas, not only utterly predictable, but constantly predicted.
This week’s violence is an ominous sign that leaving the EU took a wrecking ball to the Good Friday agreement.
Trade has plummeted and red tape has blocked our borders. Is that what ‘protecting our sovereignty’ meant?
The PM’s greatest ‘untruth’ was about the Northern Irish border – the honest route now is to let voters choose where it should be
One of the greatest political achievements of our time is at risk of becoming a casualty of a Brexit neither country voted for in the first place, writes Emma DeSouza.
In four months’ time, an avalanche of checks, paperwork and tariffs looks certain to hit Northern Ireland.
As the June extension deadline looms, the prime minister’s priority will be to minimise damage to his personal brand and legacy.
His false claims about the withdrawal agreement reveal an utter lack of interest in Brexit’s consequences for Belfast and Dublin.