Difference between revisions of "Brexit"
From thinktank
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* Hard Brexit | * Hard Brexit | ||
* ''Brexit means Brexit'' ([[Theresa may]]) <ref>Telegraph.co.uk, [http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017/01/14/theresa-may-side-eurosceptics-major-brexit-speech-revealing Theresa May to side with Eurosceptics in major Brexit speech revealing what she wants from negotiations], by Ben Riley-Smith, published on 14 January 2017.</ref> <ref>Martin Wolf: ''“Brexit means Brexit” is perhaps the silliest sentence ever uttered by a British prime minister. But it was also all that could be said.'', FT.com, [https://www.ft.com/content/fa53836e-e8d7-11e9-a240-3b065ef5fc55 Brexit is a journey without end for Britain], published on 8 October 2019.</ref> | * ''Brexit means Brexit'' ([[Theresa may]]) <ref>Telegraph.co.uk, [http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017/01/14/theresa-may-side-eurosceptics-major-brexit-speech-revealing Theresa May to side with Eurosceptics in major Brexit speech revealing what she wants from negotiations], by Ben Riley-Smith, published on 14 January 2017.</ref> <ref>Martin Wolf: ''“Brexit means Brexit” is perhaps the silliest sentence ever uttered by a British prime minister. But it was also all that could be said.'', FT.com, [https://www.ft.com/content/fa53836e-e8d7-11e9-a240-3b065ef5fc55 Brexit is a journey without end for Britain], published on 8 October 2019.</ref> | ||
+ | * ''Brexit is no big deal'' <ref>FT.com, [https://ftalphaville.ft.com/2019/10/21/1571667728000/Lord-King--Brexit-is-no-big-deal/ Lord King: Brexit is no big deal], published on 21 October 2019.</ref> | ||
+ | |||
==News== | ==News== | ||
* 26 January 2017. FT.com, [https://www.ft.com/content/0785fb99-6996-3992-8bfc-e9dac92ae484 A one-clause bill for Article 50], last retrieved on 27 January 2017. | * 26 January 2017. FT.com, [https://www.ft.com/content/0785fb99-6996-3992-8bfc-e9dac92ae484 A one-clause bill for Article 50], last retrieved on 27 January 2017. |
Revision as of 10:18, 23 October 2019
This is a stub page, in other words an article too short to provide more than rudimentary information about a subject. Anyone can edit a stub article, or remove a stub template from an article which is no longer a stub.
Brexit, a portmanteau for British exit or Britain's exit, a United Kingdom withdrawal from the European Union[1].
Term coined since 2012.
Often seen as
- Clean Brexit
- Hard Brexit
- Brexit means Brexit (Theresa may) [2] [3]
- Brexit is no big deal [4]
Contents
News
- 26 January 2017. FT.com, A one-clause bill for Article 50, last retrieved on 27 January 2017.
See also
People
Terms
Analogies
External
- FT.com, Brexit poll tracker
- Commission UK Staff
- Fair Deal for Expats
- legislation.co.uk, European Communities Act 1972, last retrieved on 27 January 2017.
Other definitions
Search other definitions of Brexit with
References
- ↑ Wikipedia, Brexit
- ↑ Telegraph.co.uk, Theresa May to side with Eurosceptics in major Brexit speech revealing what she wants from negotiations, by Ben Riley-Smith, published on 14 January 2017.
- ↑ Martin Wolf: “Brexit means Brexit” is perhaps the silliest sentence ever uttered by a British prime minister. But it was also all that could be said., FT.com, Brexit is a journey without end for Britain, published on 8 October 2019.
- ↑ FT.com, Lord King: Brexit is no big deal, published on 21 October 2019.