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The short-term consequences of Brexit are severe – but financial disaster is not inevitable
In the long term – even in the medium term – everything, of course, will depend on the details.
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
In the long term – even in the medium term – everything, of course, will depend on the details.
ByFor Sturgeon, Scotland's rightful place is in the EU. If that means independence, so be it.
ByI thought times had changed, and was glad – then Orlando hit me like a smack in the face.
ByThe novelist Paul Kingsnorth on Anglophobia, voting Leave and teaching his children to live off the land.
ByA political class that failed to predict a Leave vote has yet to come to terms with the consequences.
ByWith audio and video uncannily synched, and its grainy super 8 footage, Notes on Blindness confuses the senses.
ByThere is grave economic trouble ahead, and if the Tory right are in power, the consequences could be ghastly.
ByThe incredible shrinking island, how I got it so wrong and the meaning of “Middle England”.
ByMy week, from the moment Corbyn saw Cameron resign to the voters who went from fury to regret.
ByEven after I'd visited the morgue, and spoken to trafficked women, it was Jallo's story which stuck in my…
ByVinegar Girl and The Globe's Taming of the Shrew offer two new takes on a contentious play.
ByPress coverage of the referendum was designed to inflame xenophobia and our worst “Little England” instincts.
ByThe vote for Brexit has plunged Labour and the Conservatives into crisis.
ByMagic in the sky, on land and at sea: a late ramble can give you a new perspective on…
ByPlus: what Nietzsche knew, Douglas Carswell's curious tweets and why David Cameron is like an essay crisis.
ByBenn was born into and loves the Labour Party. His was a cry of frustration. Either he enjoys the…
ByThe Leave camp promised us all a unicorn and now claim they merely hinted at the possibility of a pony.
ByThe Science Hour on the BBC World Service.
ByTry as I might, I just can’t make myself care about the England football team.
ByIt is the Labour leader's sense of obligation to his supporters that sustains him.
ByNothing feels more artificial than doing live television, and last weekend was even stranger than usual.
ByLike Samuel Beckett and James Joyce, Mike McCormack finds glory in the banal with a new novel set on All…
ByHad one or two friendships played out differently, Britain might not have voted for Brexit.
ByI decided not to ask Paul for his autograph. Instead, I would be cool, and tweet to all my…
ByCulture is the latest book by academia's Jeremy Corbyn, but hopefully not his last.
ByHousman Country: Into the Heart of England by Peter Parker is in intriguing accumulation of evidence and analysis about…
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