Five years after Brexit, the proportion of Brits who think it was right to leave the EU is at its lowest-ever point since the referendum. Just three in 10 Britons (30 per cent) say that it was right for the UK to vote to leave the EU,
In a damning report to mark the fifth anniversary of Britain’s departure from the European Union, UK in a Changing Europe said it appears that EU policy is ‘peripheral to Starmer’s government’
Only 30 percent of Britons still believe the UK made the right decision to leave the European Union, the lowest figure recorded by pollsters since shortly after the 2016 Brexit referendum, a YouGov poll showed on Wednesday.
These polling numbers are startling, and what's more, even leave voters are now reversing their support for Brexit.
EXCLUSIVE: Former Cabinet Secretary Sir Jacob Rees-Mogg remaining EU rules must be binned to boost the economy
The threats to Ireland from a Donald Trump presidency are comparable to the risks faced by the U.K. in the wake of the Brexit referendum, the country’s oldest stockbroker has warned. In its latest health check for the Irish economy,
Nichola Mallon, head of trade and policy at Logistics UK, said truckers could be stranded for hours without access to toilets when Operation Brock, the system installed to manage traffic chaos towards Dover, is triggered.
Britain is chained in shackles that are the making of the politicians who have ruled it since the days of Tony Blair.
This week marks the fifth anniversary of Britain's official departure from the European Union. On January 31, 2020, the UK made a historic move by becoming the only member state to exit the economic bloc, following a referendum held in 2016.
The former deputy prime minister’s intervention came as it emerged Sir Keir Starmer will snub the fifth anniversary of Brexit on Friday - choosing instead to focus on his ongoing reset of relations wi
European lorry drivers are avoiding the UK because of poor conditions post-Brexit, according to industry bosses. Five years on from Britain’s departure from the European Union, we’re still yet to see any of the Brexit benefits promised. Instead, predictable problems are still arising.