It has been five years since Brexit “got done” – and voters and politicians alike are still counting the cost. Britons voted to leave the European Union by 52 per cent to 48 per cent in 2016, in a ...
One of the most dramatic claims made by those seeking to reverse Brexit is that leaving the EU is costing the UK economy £100bn every year in lost output – or 4pc of GDP. Moreover, that would ...
Listen to more stories on the Noa app. Bernie the spectacled bear is one of the star attractions at Chester Zoo in the north of England. He is also one of Brexit’s forgotten losers. Since Britain left ...
As the government prepares the public psyche for substantial tax hikes at next month’s Budget, the Chancellor has taken a Brexit-shaped risk. Keir Starmer’s government has largely opted for caution ...
In “A Fragile Peace: Inside Brexit and Belfast,” actor and filmmaker Rory Duffy and producer Hyun Joo trace the history of a 30-year conflict, exploring the way the hard-won peace is threatened now by ...
LONDON — Britain's two major political parties have continued to focus their campaigning on taxation policy and the economy ahead of elections early next month, but for many British voters, ...
Long regarded as two versions of the same populist phenomenon, they’re now clearly two different stories — each with its own cautionary tale. Credit...Photo illustration by Ricardo Tomás Supported by ...
Britain’s decision to leave the European Union in 2016 was sold to voters as a magic bullet that would revitalize the country’s economy. Its impact is still reverberating. By Mark Landler Reporting ...
Brexit has caused almost twice as much damage to the UK economy than estimated by official forecasts, according to new paper from a group of experts including a senior Bank of England economist. The ...
LONDON — When Britain and the European Union held their first summit Monday since Brexit, analysts say it was less like a couple getting back together and more like exes realizing they've still got to ...
THE hungry fiend is screaming the Apocalypse of clay again in every corner of the land - to borrow a phrase from Patrick Kavanagh. Why do I say that, seeing that we were never so well fed? But, ...