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The London bureau chief for Germany’s public broadcaster reflects on Britain’s government.
As crises mount, the polls show voters turning at last. But the national newspapers that backed Leave – even the two now edited by Remainers – continue to pretend there is nothing wrong.
As the Telegraph’s Brussels correspondent between 1989 and 1994, he invented a self-serving journalistic genre that set a poisonous tone for British EU reporting.
Boris Johnson’s Trumpian remarks on the “deep state” will almost certainly have a destructive effect on British democracy.
As a correspondent, the likely future PM produced exaggerated tales that were lapped up at home.
Is Brexit going well? The same media outlets that blurted deafening pro-Leave messages have become eerily quiet of late.
Even voices on the Right acknowledge this fact, says Paul Vallely. / THERE have been so many U-turns recently that you might be forgiven for having missed this one. The Daily Telegraph ran a piece at the weekend headlined: “Project Fear was right all along.”
The Tory Party has been taken over by cynics and fantasists, says former Telegraph editor Max Hastings – which is why he has decided to vote Labour.
We didn’t know the facts about the EU before voting to leave. We need to learn before considering to re-join.
Brexit is an existential threat to Conservatism. When it fails, the party will need to ask itself some searching questions.
Anthony Robinson presents a panoramic view of the current travails defining a post-Brexit nation.
The UK’s most-read national newspaper titles have shown a strong bias favouring Brexit, Press Gazette analysis of the final month of campaigning shows.