An interconnected outlier: the unaccounted costs of Brexit
By leaving the EU Britain gives up unique ties and influence with its EU partners. They are fast adapting.
By leaving the EU Britain gives up unique ties and influence with its EU partners. They are fast adapting.
The Franco-German axis, the Big Three and the Weimar Triangle, are all well-known constellations of European heavyweights. ECFR’s EU28 Survey allows for dissecting the complex relations within ‘the Big Six’, evaluating these and other bilateral and trilateral inter-group relationships in the face of the Brexit.
The remaining 27 EU members have turned the page after Brexit much faster than the UK itself
The Prime Minister’s opportunistic decision to capitalise on her strong domestic standing is complicated by the international context
In an already divided society, the uncertainty of Brexit could breed instability
Britain’s departure from the EU may make the case for its nuclear deterrent replacement harder to sustain
London waves farewell to Berlin as Germany softens on EU dissent. But the goal remains: the EU’s survival
Mark Leonard speaks with Tom Nuttall, The Economist's Charlemagne columnist, about Theresa May's Brexit speech.
With both sides ignoring the decline of the liberal world order, the Brexit process is set to result in tragedy for both the UK and EU
It is not the absence of a strategy that is most troubling, but the fact that the government appears to be going into the negotiations with aims that are intellectually incoherent, even delusional