Government warning: Brexit can damage your health
The Government’s leaflet setting out it’s case for Britain remaining in the EU is a pretty dour production. From next week it goes out to every household in the UK.
The Government’s leaflet setting out it’s case for Britain remaining in the EU is a pretty dour production. From next week it goes out to every household in the UK.
You might have thought that today’s Cabinet would see fireworks, not least as it was preceded by a meeting of Political Cabinet with Boris Johnson turning up. But Mr Johnson had nothing to say.
Will David Cameron forgive Michael Gove for backing “Leave” – and for casting doubt on whether the renegotiation deal is legally watertight? And will George Osborne be more forgiving?
The renegotiation deal David Cameron struck with other EU leaders is not legally binding, according to his cabinet colleague and friend Michael Gove.
Heads of more than a third of the country’s biggest businesses are supporting Britain’s continued membership of the EU ahead of the June referendum.
Boris Johnson grabbed most of the newspaper front pages this morning after announcing he will be campaigning for Britain to leave the EU.
Polling research suggests the UK is deeply divided on whether to back Brexit or vote for the country to stay in the EU.
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.
The Brussels summit will have an “English breakfast” on Friday morning to look at the British negotiating points, a senior EU official said this morning. That’ll be a plenary session which Donald Tusk, the European Council President who chairs the meeting, hopes will sign off on the text.
One EU diplomat said the whole deal now looks “do-able and likely” and he would be “surprised if it didn’t happen” this week.
Now David Camerom will have to compete with Tory opponents vying for TV time, having perhaps only one news cycle entirely to himself.
The claim “If we can get this deal in Europe, if we can this renegotiation fixed and we can stay in a reformed Europe, you know what you get… you know that the borders stay in Calais.” David Cameron, 8 February 2016 The background Could the kind of squalid migrant camps we see on the…
Michael Gove defends the prison reforms on Channel 4 News tonight and tries to sell them to inmates at The Mount prison outside Hemel Hempstead.
David Cameron is calling for reforms in prisons to combat high levels of violence, self-harm and re-offending.
A London conference aims to raise over £6 billion to help Syria’s neighbours provide for thousands of refugees. But in Geneva separate peace talks hoping to end the Syrian conflict collapse.