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Supporters of the European Convention on Human Rights must seize the moment and confront right-wing propaganda demanding the UK leaves it now - or risk a Brexit-style disaster, argues Kevin Maguire.
No bank is obliged to give anyone facilities if it doesn’t wish to – the same as if Farage was barred from a pub or banned from a shop, writes Sean O’Grady.
Rightly, a central tenet of British foreign policy has long been to abide – and to expect others to abide – by international law.
The Northern Ireland protocol row shows the similarities between two former imperial powers intent on regaining lost glory.
‘Global Britain’ can only become a reality if Johnson rebuilds his links with European partners.
Seduced by money, and then isolated by Brexit, the UK has foregone its chance to lead in the response to the Ukraine crisis.
As the Russian leader tries to diminish Europe, he finds ideologues such as Boris Johnson are doing the job for him.
When great powers fail, New Zealand and other small states must organise to protect their interests, Robert G. Patman writes.
Almost every nation at some point believes it’s special and on a mission. They’re all wrong, and the sooner we get over this nonsense, the better.
The refusal of the British Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, to publish a bipartisan Parliamentary report on Russian involvement in the 2016 EU referendum is the latest development in a prolonged Brexit crisis that is eroding the UK's strategic credibility in the world.
Nowadays, Britain’s words and actions on the world stage are so at odds with its values that one must wonder what has happened to the country. Since the June 2016 Brexit referendum, British foreign policy seems to have all but collapsed — and even to have disowned its past and its governing ideas.