13 04, 2018

EU capital market union positions to deliver financial services post-Brexit

By |2020-05-04T09:48:19+00:00April 13th, 2018|Categories: Brexit|Tags: , , |

By Bob Savic, Senior Research Fellow, Global Policy Institute and Corporate Advisory Partner with Petersburg Capital LLP 13th April 2018 As Theresa May’s Conservative government and the European Union prepare negotiating positions for a future post-Brexit relationship, the UK’s financial services trade with the EU’s Single Market looks set to [...]

11 04, 2018

The Austrian Presidency could derail the EU’s plans ahead of the 2019 changeover

By |2020-05-04T09:48:20+00:00April 11th, 2018|Categories: Brexit|Tags: , |

The Austrian Presidency could derail the EU's plans ahead of the 2019 changeover   by David Gow, Former German Correspondent, Industrial Editor and European Business Editor, The Guardian 3rd April 2018 This article was first published by Acumen Public Affairs. Austria takes over the EU presidency on July 1, and [...]

27 03, 2018

Labour’s Brexit Options: Starmer’s Step in the Right Direction

By |2018-03-27T12:42:48+00:00March 27th, 2018|Categories: Blog, Europe|Tags: , , , , |

  By Brendan Donnelly Director, The Federal Trust   27th March 2018   Last week was a difficult period for those inclined to argue that the Labour Party is or may become an effective political vehicle for opposition to Brexit. To the applause of John Redwood, Jeremy Corbyn dismissed Owen [...]

14 03, 2018

The Brexit negotiations: Looking forward and back

By |2020-05-04T09:48:21+00:00March 14th, 2018|Categories: Brexit|Tags: , |

The Brexit negotiations: Looking forward and back 19th March 2018 On the day when the British and EU negotiators agreed on a Brexit transition deal our expert panel reviewed and assessed its importance and possible implications for Britain's departure from the EU. On this last occasion before his move to [...]

14 03, 2018

Brexit and the Withdrawal Bill: a multi-player game?

By |2018-03-14T12:25:00+00:00March 14th, 2018|Categories: Blog, Europe|Tags: , , , , , |

by Dr Andrew Blick, Senior Lecturer in Politics and Contemporary History, King’s College London; Senior Research Fellow, The Federal Trust   14th March 2018 Through its insistence on leaving the European Union (EU), the Theresa May government has created an immense challenge for itself. The task is one of immense [...]

9 03, 2018

Brexit’s impact on the UK economy is more akin to slow strangulation than sudden shock

By |2020-05-04T09:49:13+00:00March 9th, 2018|Categories: Brexit|Tags: , |

by Bob Savic, Senior Research Fellow at the Global Policy Institute and an advisory partner with Petersburg Capital LLP in London.   6th March 2018 For about two years (i.e. from December 2015 to date) corporate investment in the UK economy has been growing at or around 0%. This is [...]

6 03, 2018

Mrs May’s Mansion House Speech – The Irish Dimension

By |2020-05-04T09:49:18+00:00March 6th, 2018|Categories: Brexit|Tags: , , |

Mrs May’s Mansion House Speech – The Irish Dimension   By John Bruton, former Irish Taoiseach 4th March 2018 This article was first published in the Meath Chronicle. My first reaction, watching Theresa May’s speech, was that The UK is going to put itself, and all the other EU countries, [...]

3 03, 2018

Is Brexit worth it, Prime Minister?

By |2018-03-05T12:13:09+00:00March 3rd, 2018|Categories: Blog, Europe|Tags: , , , , , |

by Brendan Donnelly Director, The Federal Trust 3rd March 2018   After her speech yesterday about the Brexit negotiations, the Prime Minister was asked by a German journalist whether she thought Brexit was worth all the effort and disruption it entailed. Although British withdrawal from the EU is probably the [...]

24 01, 2018

The case for a new British referendum on the EU is becoming unstoppable

By |2018-02-02T13:01:27+00:00January 24th, 2018|Categories: Blog, Europe|Tags: , , , |

by Brendan Donnelly, Director, The Federal Trust 24th January 2018   In recent weeks, there has been widespread discussion of the possibility of a new referendum later in the year to endorse or reject the terms negotiated by Mrs May and her government for British withdrawal from the European Union. [...]

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