As the UK continues to reckon with the aftermath of Brexit, debates over its long-term impact remain heated. While some argue that leaving the EU was a necessary step for sovereignty and regaining ...
Following the fifth anniversary of the UK's departure from the EU, Mirror readers have described Brexit as an 'unmitigated disaster' without 'one single benefit' after the economic costs were ...
Has Brexit failed? It’s the patently stupid question that people won’t stop asking. Anniversaries lend themselves to reflection, so exactly five years on from Britain formally leaving the EU ...
Most Brits, including those who voted to leave the European Union, cannot think of any Brexit benefits exactly five years after the UK’s departure, a new poll shows. The UK narrowly voted to ...
Opinions are split on how much of a benefit Brexit has or can be. Economists and thinktanks regularly cite massive figures in the tens or hundreds of billions when they talk about the negative ...
But Brexit was never about economics. During the 2016 referendum campaign, George Osborne’s Treasury ran a so-called Project Fear strategy of trying to scare voters into backing Remain, with dire ...
They say the United Kingdom will end up a "serf of the EU" and could be hit with US tariffs if the Prime Minister gives up Brexit freedoms. On Monday Sir Keir will become the first PM to attend a ...
Our readers have reflected on this period, debating if Brexit has lived up to their expectations. The referendum itself sprang from then-Prime Minister David Cameron's strategy to placate the ...
It follows the fifth anniversary of the UK's official departure from the EU on Friday, with a YouGov poll suggesting that half a decade on, public support for Brexit has hit an all-time low. With ...
Eight years ago, voters across the UK faced a historic choice in the Brexit referendum. Now, five years after officially leaving the EU, the country is still grappling with the fallout.
Five years ago on Friday, two separate crowds gathered near the UK Parliament: one group cheered and carried Union Jack flags, while the other was more sombre and bore European Union banners.