Cameron, Europe, Boris and moving on
The dense detail of the talks is a tough sell. Jobs, interest rates, exports… that’s the stuff David Cameron wants to get on to.
6,994 items found
Forty per cent of Afghan civilians say they’d leave the country if they could – fleeing persecution, war and deprivation in greater numbers now than at any time since the Taliban were ousted. But, unlike Syrians and Iraqis, the European Union classes most as economic migrants. Our Asia Correspondent, Jonathan Miller, has been to Herat…
The Labour leader is backing the Remain campaign after opposing EU treaties, institutions and policies for decades.
The dense detail of the talks is a tough sell. Jobs, interest rates, exports… that’s the stuff David Cameron wants to get on to.
When Britain was last asked to vote on Europe, back in 1975, Hilary Benn was in the No campaign. But, unlike his father, he has since been convinced of the benefits of the EU.
Is the PM favouring departments led by ministers likely to back him over Europe? That’s the concern in Whitehall about how the negotiations with the EU played out.
The Prime Minister says he has persuaded Brussels to give Britain a blueprint for “substantial change”. Reality or rhetoric?
If David Cameron wins the European referendum he will declare it has settled Britain’s destiny. Bill Cash says it will do nothing of the sort.
A young man could be in line for a life-changing small fortune after finding 100,000 euros floating down the River Danube in Austria.
We have arrived at a crossroads. Few can have believed that the bloody killings of Charlie Hebdo’s staff would be the end of it.
I asked what it would say about David Cameron’s “substantial” renegotiation if the whole negotiation was wrapped up and the vote done and dusted a year and a half before his original deadline.
Six families from Iraq and Syria are the first asylum-seekers to be relocated from Greece as part of an EU-funded resettlement scheme.
Abu Salah, who fled after his home town in Syria was destroyed by the Assad regime, documented his dramatic voyage to Europe. This is his story.
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban calls the mass migration of thousands of refugees a “brutal threat” to Europe.
The latest dramatic scenes from Eastern Europe show chaos at yet another country’s border. This time, the focus of those trying to reach Western Europe is Croatia.
Pressure is growing on countries outside Europe – particularly the Gulf states – to take in more refugees from the Syrian civil war. What are the facts?