Brexit has never been the epic struggle between the ordinary man and the establishment. Rather, it is a storm-in-a-teacup skirmish between two neoliberal elites, each with its own social project.
"The BREXIT vote was a vote to ‘take back control’ in an international system where this is nowhere on offer."
"Although I realize that Brexit has many far-reaching consequences, I tend to agree that this development provides freedom to other countries, who are in much need of this freedom."
"Never can I remember feeling the political situation in my country is so bleak."
"It was the existence of the British Empire, and the benefits they gained from it that made Scots, Welsh and Irish want to be British in the first place."
"They are in fact among the keenest to destroy these institutions and make Britain ever more subservient to the City of London."
In one week, Britain's unwritten constitution has utterly unravelled.
Progressives in Britain have faced a vast set back. But they can't give up.
Britain needs to reassemble its politics.
In an acutely honest article, Owen Jones has called for a clear, coherent message. England must be part of the answer.
Instead of being a nostalgic admonition, the cry of ‘never again war’ has once again become acutely relevant for Europe.
What the immigration debate taught me about the view of stakeholdership in the United Kingdom: A Black Perspective.