Home
AI
World
Politics
Health
Crime & justice
Science & technology
Social issues
Sports
Money
Entertainment
Environment/energy
Military
Culture
Weather
Media






Home
Bias Split
Public FiguresControversies

Sign Up for Our Free Newsletters
Sign Up for Our Free Newsletters

Sign Up!
Sign Up Now!

How our sliders workAboutContact UsNewsletter Archive
MediaFAQGlossaryPrivacy Policy
  1. Home

Brexit: A History of UK-EU Relations

  • #Europe
  • #United Kingdom
  • #Politics
  • #Governance
Brexit: A History of UK-EU Relations
context
+2
JUL 17
Above: Then-German Chancellor Angela Merkel and former U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron in Berlin, Germany on May 29, 2015. Image copyright: Sean Gallup/Getty Images
context last updated JUL 17

The Spin

Left narrative

Brexit was the world's greatest self-inflicted wound, trading influence for isolation and economic prosperity for nationalist rhetoric. Nine years later, growth is stagnating, young people face restricted opportunities, immigration has ballooned, and the U.K.'s global voice grows ever quieter. The polling is clear: the public regrets the decision and wants to rejoin the EU. The U.K. must reverse this dreadful decision before it is too late.

The HeraldEU Reporter

Right narrative

Brexit gave the U.K. the autonomy to make its own laws, control its borders, and strike global deals. Now, the government seeks to undermine these freedoms. Brexit wasn't a mistake, it was the democratic will of the British public, and Starmer's plan to slowly reintegrate the U.K. back under Brussels' thumb betrays the very principles of democracy. As the EU stagnates, Britain's long-term future lies as an independent nation on the global stage.

The SunThe Telegraph

Pro-government narrative

While Brexit continues to leave a nation divided, for better or worse the U.K. must accept the past and look towards the future. In perilous times for global security, it is time for the continent to reset relations. A return to the EU is off the cards, but that does not mean either side can afford to ignore the importance of one of its closest allies. Some things are bigger than politics, and the future is stronger together.

GuardianPolitics Home

Government-critical narrative

The Brexit referendum was a great opportunity for the U.K. to reaffirm its sovereignty, as well as recalibrate its global influence. Spurred on by a bloated, bureaucratic EU that made a mockery of democratic principles, the British public took the bold decision to leave, but the subsequent political and diplomatic fumbling of successive governments has subdued U.K. influence for generations to come. A diluted approach to Brexit has left the nation at the mercy of its neighbors and trading partners.

GuardianMedium

Metaculus Prediction


Public Figures

David Cameron

Angela Merkel

Boris Johnson

Keir Starmer

Ursula von der Leyen


The Controversies


UNLIKELYLIKELY
Status:Open
Will Any Other Country Follow the UK in Leaving the EU?
Controversy
JUL 16JUL 16

UNLIKELYLIKELY
Status:Open
Will the UK Join the Pan-Euro-Mediterranean Convention?
Controversy
JUL 16JUL 16

UNLIKELYLIKELY
Status:Open
Will the UK Join or Create a Youth Mobility Scheme?
Controversy
JUL 16JUL 16

UNLIKELYLIKELY
Status:Open
Will the UK Economy Grow By 2% GDP In a Year Under Labour?
Controversy
JUL 16JUL 16

Go Deeper

UK, Germany Sign First Friendship Treaty Since WW2
Story
+6
JUL 17JUL 17

Articles on this story

‘It feels like we never left’: resentment builds in one of UK’s firmest Brexit-backing areas
GuardianMAY 30
Brexit: Johnson says Britain will leave EU on 31 October 'do or die'
GuardianJUL 2020
Starmers EU reset triggers outbreak of Brexit derangement syndrome | John Crace
GuardianMAY 30
EU referendum to take place on 23 June, David Cameron confirms
GuardianJUL 2020
The Guardian view on Britain and Europe: Labour must bring it on | Editorial
GuardianJAN 30