EU
EU law in the UK, 1973-2020: an obituary
We are stronger for having known you
The revolution will be institutionalised
The great liberal promise is that power must always be held to account. Agreed political rules and formal institutions are the means to honour it. But they are under assault by a populist right—and a misguided left
The government may soon strike an EU deal. Labour must abstain on it
Active endorsement is out of the question. But to vote against an agreement would be an act of destruction
The obstacles to a Brexit deal are not what you think
Do not look at disputes between the two sides but within them
Who killed soft Brexit?
The mysterious story of how a split-down-the-middle nation killed off the chance to be half-in and half-out of Europe
The urgency of renewed UK commitment to human rights
The European Convention is 70 today. We should celebrate, not undermine, what is one of the most successful international instruments of modern times
Businesses are not prepared for Brexit. How could they be?
Firms couldn’t plan as the government refused to confront the realities of leaving. Now we are out of time
The Brexit grand bargain is in sight, but not yet within reach
A deal requires three pieces to fall into place in the coming weeks
Why the Internal Market Bill is both a rule of law and devolution problem
Yielding to a new economic constitution
The Brexit dream is dying
How Ireland turned the tables on the UK
The House of Lords should remind the government that the rule of law is not negotiable
Trust, not Trumpism, is what the UK needs
A deft and witty account of Britain’s relationship with the EU
Stephen Wall spent decades with a ringside seat at the Anglo-European circus