Wales is a swing country in Britain's EU referendum. So, how is the debate playing out?
The EU will continue to be perceived as authoritarian until it reforms its relationship with national citizenship and political community.
Scientific advance relies on creativity, cooperation, and financing. To leave the EU would diminish all three, dimming the light of British science in the world and threatening the UK's future economy.
There is no room for Britain’s turning away from Europe to a fantasy mid-Atlantic or neo-Commonwealth position of the kind floated, typically unseriously, by Boris Johnson and Michael Gove.
Eastern European migration takes place in a very different context than it once did. What drives people to leave, and what drives them back again?
The Brexiteers believe in a myth of British exceptionalism. It's time they stopped telling themselves fairy tales.
People fear the extreme and demand their governments be tough on security, but in truth our safety comes largely through control of the mundane. The EU excels at this.
The image of the benefits-scrounging migrant is potent, but there is no evidence that this is widespread. Migrants come to work and make lives, not to get a free ride.
Poles have lived, worked, and settled in the UK for 12 years now. It's no longer so easy for them to pick up and leave.
Uncontrolled EU migration costs Britain financially and increases the strain on public services, resulting in a lower quality of life for many Britons and a less generous nation.
Brexit campaigners have yet to offer credible visions on immigration that address voters concerns while also acknowledging certain realities. Whichever side does so will greatly improve their chances in June.
The Leave campaign argues Brexit would give Britain back its control over immigration. Even if that were true, the current situation suggests control best comes through cooperation.