Brexit Britain: The buccaneering begins at home
What Global Britain means may be starting to take shape – but its emphasis appears more on the “Britain” than the “global”
What Global Britain means may be starting to take shape – but its emphasis appears more on the “Britain” than the “global”
The EU can learn from Brexit how to manage divergence and differentiate integration – for the sake of its other neighbours
For all the ‘sovereignty’ it has gained, post-Brexit Britain will be trapped in a future of permanent negotiation
Following an uncompromisingly hard Brexit, all the new limitations and sources of friction in Britain’s economic, political, and human interactions with the EU will only now kick in
The populists of Budapest and Warsaw are blackmailing the EU over the rule of law. They cannot be allowed to succeed.
The UK will have to decide how involved it wants to be in EU defence efforts. It seems likely that the country’s aim will be to have flexible structures that allow it to plug into European foreign and defence policy where doing so is in its interests.
The United Kingdom’s strategy should be to take a more considered, sectoral approach to trade – thereby strengthening its own internal market and its future relationship with key EU member states
With Joe Biden about to enter the White House, London could need to display ambition on climate issues, or face being left behind by Washington and Brussels if they identified this policy area as a vehicle for rapprochement
The politics are the only thing that matter to Boris Johnson and whether he signs a new deal with the European Union