Tensions with Russia and the US have made both partners in the Brexit negotiations more aware of their shared interests than they seemed to be a year ago.
Tensions with Russia and the US have made both partners in the Brexit negotiations more aware of their shared interests than they seemed to be a year ago.
May might want a unified Britain to face the ever-increasing difficulties of Brexit, but the country is more divided than ever with 365 years to go, and it is a failure of government that is to blame.
Thousands of Britons up and down the country have taken to the streets to protest the government’s plans to take the UK out of the European Union.
Leading Brexit ultra Jacob Rees-Mogg has been exposed profiteering from an investment in a sanctioned Russian bank.
The decision to hand the contract for creating Brexit Britain’s new blue passports to a French firm has sparked outrage in the Leave camp.