It's been almost two years since the UK voted to leave the EU - why was the decision made - and what happens next? Here are some of the key moments. If you can't see the timeline, follow this link ...
Brexit is having “profound and ongoing stifling effects” on goods trade between the United Kingdom and the European Union, according to a new report that adds to evidence of the economic ...
Brexit red tape on British businesses has caused goods trade between the UK and EU to slump and the problem is getting worse, a study has warned. Many smaller UK producers have given up exporting ...
The Brexit deal has caused a sharp decline in UK-EU trade and is likely to continue getting even worse, a group of economists has warned. A new report released on Monday by Aston University ...
Here’s the timeline for the changes ... Myth 2: “The UK is being punished because of Brexit.” Nonsense. Work on strengthening the European Union’s external border began a decade ago.
With Keir Starmer's visit to Ireland, the Labour leader has become the first British prime minister to visit the Republic of Ireland in the past five years.
British people will have to pay to visit the European Union from next year as a result of Brexit. Anyone who lives in a non-EU country - including the UK - must apply for a £6 “visa waiver ...
So given his track record, is Brexit safe in the Prime Minister's hands? He says it is, but can he be trusted? In opposition, Sir Keir was adamant he would not seek to restore freedom of movement ...
Our Lego Brexit map shows how London and Scotland voted to remain in the EU, along with most of Northern Ireland. But England and Wales overwhelmingly voted to leave. After the vote, David Cameron ...
However, he has made it clear that he wants to renegotiate elements of the post-Brexit trade deal with the EU in order to bolster growth. “We are also resetting our relationship with the EU and ...
The disconnect between political and economic timelines remains a significant, and underappreciated, cost of Brexit. As I have written in the past, the extended timeline for a political resolution ...
The June 23 Brexit vote was not a “Lehman moment ... This tension is the result of a disconnect between economic and political timelines. The second risk is that it will distort decision ...