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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.
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.
The prime minister has imperilled peace in Northern Ireland, and every day the economic fallout worsens.
A summit crucial to the issue of climate change is instead mired in disentangling the mess of Britain’s exit from the EU
Northern Ireland’s first minister has paid the price for believing the promises of the hard Brexiteers.
The key goal of the government is to placate the right by sustaining foreign quarrels.
EU must continue to monitor and ensure that the British hold up their side of the bargain.
'I keep hearing my fellow unionists complaining that their anger over the existence of the Northern Ireland Protocol is not being recognised or taken seriously.'
Trade has plummeted and red tape has blocked our borders. Is that what ‘protecting our sovereignty’ meant?
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.
Deep within the Northern Ireland protocol bill, ministers are making a sinister grab for yet more unchecked powers.
Boris Johnson’s rotten regime has not covered itself in glory. / For an un-jaundiced sense of how post-Brexit – sorry Global – Britain is viewed from abroad as the wheels fall off Boris Johnson’s rotten regime, Italy is a good place to start.
Many Conservative party members will be wondering where they go from here. / There is talk of damage limitation and trying to save as many seats as possible in the next election.
The recent closure of the Charles Peguy centre is sad but hardly surprising.
Prime minister personifies British hostility to international democratic norms.
This summer has provided ample demonstration of the difficulties of the relationship between the UK and the EU.
The lucrative UK/US trade deal is dead - so will it Liz Truss now press ahead with ripping up parts of the Northern Ireland Protocol?
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.
Special trade arrangements are crucial to peace and prosperity in Northern Ireland. Yet Brexiters in London refuse to see that.
The Northern Ireland protocol row shows the similarities between two former imperial powers intent on regaining lost glory.
The decision to breach trust again in relation to the Northern Ireland Protocol, by acting unilaterally rather than through the agreed joint procedures, was in obvious contradiction with Frost’s subsequent appeal for good will.
The prime minister seeks to game and inflame a state of mind that rejects complex reality in favour of symbols and fantasy.
No Conservative will dare admit the searingly obvious: Brexit is proving a catastrophe for Britain.
The PM’s greatest ‘untruth’ was about the Northern Irish border – the honest route now is to let voters choose where it should be