Her told a meeting in 1994 that “it has recently been said that the option of leaving the Community [is] ‘unthinkable’. I believe this attitude is rather simplistic.”
“I wish you all the best for the future. I want to return to the kind of vision that Churchill set out.”
“Once we’ve left, we are never coming back – and rest, frankly, is detail. We’re going: we will be gone.”
Since 2016, the amount of “hate crime” has probably gone down. The number of UK residents from other EU states has certainly gone up.
The second piece in our mini-series on the road to Brexit explores the challenges which the anti-EU movement overcame to survive and then thrive.
The political has been captured by the legal. Decisions of an executive, legislative and democratic nature have been assumed by our courts.
“Nothing will change” after 31 January, and it will be “very difficult” to secure a trade deal by the end of 2020, says Ireland’s Europe Minister.
It will take most of us a very long time to adjust to the dizzying turnaround of last month’s general election.
The Deputy Speaker, Nigel Evans, makes the historic announcement to the House of Commons.
This is the final article in a three-part series on using technology to boost our economy after Brexit.
The Prime Minister resembles a batsman who is enjoying himself.
This is the second in a three-part series on using technology to boost our economy after Brexit.
By the time May finally stepped down, I was concerned about the future of our parliamentary democracy. What a waste of well over three years.
A new study by a former senior adviser to two Tory Chancellors gets itself back to front. Inequality is not so much a cause of processes as a consequence.
The third piece in our mini-series on the road to Brexit comes from the Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union.