On June 23 2016, a slight majority of Britons voted to leave the European Union. Today surveys show that more people are ...
There was, and is, much more to Brexit than mere economics. In particular, the catchphrase of the Leave campaign was “take ...
Ten years after the vote, our economy is battered – and our national conversation darkens by the day. Still, there is reason for hope, says Guardian columnist Jonathan Freedland ...
The electoral collapse of the Labour and Conservative Parties in the United Kingdom has caused journalists and opinion columnists once again to blame all of the country’s problems on the 2016 decision ...
LONDON (Reuters) - British Prime Minister Theresa May has carried out "scenario planning" for a second Brexit referendum in case she is forced by parliament to hold one, the Daily Telegraph newspaper ...
The results of the June 23, 2016, Brexit vote were a shock to many in the United Kingdom and elsewhere. By a 52%-48% margin, ...
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney recently made a significant political blunder when he tried to compare a referendum that ...
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney has called a looming poll on whether Alberta should become independent "a dangerous bluff." Carney, who was head of the Bank of England when the U.K. voted to leave ...
People in many European nations see the European Union more favorably than they did in 2016, when United Kingdom citizens voted to withdraw from the EU. Opinion of the EU has remained largely ...
In January 2013, the then-prime minister David Cameron announced that there would be a “very simple” referendum on whether Britain should stay in or get out of the European Union. The result would ...
The whole point of Brexit was to change the UK’s relationship with Europe. And one of the less visible shifts has occurred in the financial markets, affecting pension funds and the cost of borrowing.