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										<title>News from the Brexit Cliff Edge - 8th Apr 2019</title>
										<date>8th Apr 2019</date>
										<description></description>
										<link>https://nfind.uk/brexit_cliff_edge/index.php/newsletter=41</link>
										<copyright>brexit_cliff_edge</copyright>
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													<title>Brexit Revoke Article 50 if deal fails Theresa May urged</title>
													<section>Jobs at Risk</section>
													<author>The Times</author>
													<description>
													Manufacturers are calling on Theresa May to revoke article 50 if she cant strike a Brexit agreement next week in the latest sign that the looming possibility of Britain leaving the EU without a deal is hammering confidence in the sector. Make UK the lobby group that represents 20000 manufacturing firms last night wrote to May and Jeremy Corbyn the Labour leader saying it is critical for the future of UK manufacturing businesses and their workforces that we bring the current uncertainty to an end. The letter from Make UKs chief executive Stephen Phipson seen by The Sunday Times comes after twothirds of the groups members backed revocation of article 50 if May does not reach a deal by the new deadline of April 12.</description>
													<link>https://www.thetimes.co.uk/edition/news/brexit-revoke-article-50-if-deal-fails-theresa-may-urged-7gd2z3l3r</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Jaguar Land Rover to start Brexit shutdown</title>
													<section>Jobs at Risk</section>
													<author>BBC</author>
													<description>
													Jaguar Land Rover is to shut down production for a week because of uncertainties around Brexit. It will affect thousands of staff at Castle Bromwich Solihull and Wolverhampton in the West Midlands and Halewood on Merseyside from Monday.
The shutdown is in addition to a scheduled closure the following week for Easter.
Unite the union said the move was agreed in January when the UK was due to leave the EU on 29 March. The company said it needed more certainty around Brexit and warned that a nodeal Brexit would cost it more than 1.2bn in profit each year.</description>
													<link>https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-47845057</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Dairy farmers Nodeal Brexit could put us out of business overnight </title>
													<section>Jobs at Risk</section>
													<author>Sky News</author>
													<description>
													People living and working on the Irish border say they have no option but to prepare for a nodeal Brexit on Friday. Northern Irish farmers fear an immediate loss of trade with the Republic could put hundreds of them out of business overnight. Damian McGenity a parttime farmer from Jonesborough one mile on the northern side says the economic impact would be catastrophic.</description>
													<link>https://news.sky.com/story/dairy-farmers-no-deal-brexit-could-put-us-out-of-business-overnight-11686718?fbclid=IwAR1-9mLQ7caOdnuCN4vIccWSojQc4VsKoy65cjiveYDEeXs7JaFN24WizQ8</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Dudson More than 300 jobs go at StokeonTrent pottery firm</title>
													<section>Jobs at Risk</section>
													<author>BBC</author>
													<description>
													Jobs are lost with immediate effect as 200yearold Dudson in StokeonTrent collapses. Representatives from the GMB union said staff were told to leave the premises with no notice whatsoever and called it a devastating blow. Administrators PWC said it was not commercially viable to continue trading the company. A total of 318 people have been made redundant with immediate effect.
In March Wedgwood  another of the citys potteries  announced plans to cut its workforce by about a third.</description>
													<link>https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-stoke-staffordshire-47815382</link>
													<pubDate>5th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>The NHS is underprepared for a nodeal Brexit  and I am one of the thousands that might die as a result</title>
													<section>Administrative Fall Out</section>
													<author>The Independent</author>
													<description>
													On Wednesday night BBC Newsnight revealed some lifesaving drugs have proved impossible to stockpile  including those used to treat epilepsy  and that the doctors who had been given this information had been told to keep quiet. Back in January the health secretary Matthew Hancock told parliament that the requisite medicine supplies had been stockpiled in the event of a nodeal Brexit. Last night we learned that was not the case. Currently a no deal would mean potential shortages of three important drugs for epilepsy bipolar disorder and neuropathic pain. This would be life threatening for patients.</description>
													<link>https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/brexit-no-deal-nhs-epilepsy-bipolar-medicine-stockpiling-a8855131.html</link>
													<pubDate>5th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Google Pay tells Euro users it has ditched UK for Ireland ahead of Brexit</title>
													<section>Administrative Fall Out</section>
													<author>The Register</author>
													<description>
													Google Pay has this week shifted its service provision for all nonUK users in the European Economic Area from Britain and into Ireland ahead of Brexit. Up until now the Google Payments terms of service have been offered by Google Payment Limited a company incorporated in the UK. But the ad and search giant this week revealed it had had to change the terms due to the UKs evolving relationship with the European Union. UK residents payments will continue to be processed in Blighty. In an email sent to all users in the EEA except those in the UK and seen by The Register it said the terms of service would as of 4 April be provided by Google Ireland Limited.</description>
													<link>https://www.theregister.co.uk/2019/04/05/google_pay_tells_euro_users_its_ditched_uk_for_ireland_ahead_of_brexit/</link>
													<pubDate>5th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Customs industry not ready for Brexit</title>
													<section>Administrative Fall Out</section>
													<author>Sky News</author>
													<description>
													Britains customs system is not ready for Brexit  and could still take another three years to be prepared. That is the view of one of the most highprofile figures in the British customs industry who chairs a key committee advising the government. He told Sky News that plans had been left to the last minute. Peter MacSwiney is chair of the Brexit committee at the Joint Customs Consultative Committee JCCC.
It represents the leading players in the industry and liaises with both the government and Her Majestys Revenue and Customs HMRC about the implications of Brexit. </description>
													<link>https://news.sky.com/story/customs-industry-not-ready-for-brexit-11685075</link>
													<pubDate>5th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>First British passports without European Union printed on cover issued</title>
													<section>Administrative Fall Out</section>
													<author>ITV News</author>
													<description>
													British passports without the words European Union on the front cover have been issued despite the Brexit delay. The burgundy passports were introduced from March 30 the day after Britain was expected to leave the EU. Some passports including the words European Union will continue to be issued while the remaining stock is used up. But those applying for a new travel document will not be able to choose between the two. Dark blue passports reminiscent of travel documents before the UK joined the EU will be available from the end of the year.</description>
													<link>https://www.itv.com/news/2019-04-05/first-british-passports-with-european-union-printed-on-cover-issued/</link>
													<pubDate>5th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>As the UK updates its .eu Brexit advice yet again an alternative hovers into view</title>
													<section>Administrative Fall Out</section>
													<author>The Register</author>
													<description>
													On Friday the UK government again updated its advice for Brits with .eu internet addresses. If we were to summarize it in a sentence it would be god knows whats going to happen but you should probably prepare for the worst. That updated advice comes after the company that operates the .eu registry EURid was forced yet again to change its advice. A notice on EURids dedicated Brexit webpage now reads Due to ongoing uncertainties over the United Kingdoms withdrawal from the European Union EURid has placed on hold any plan regarding domain names registered to individuals and undertakings located in the United Kingdom and Gibraltar.</description>
													<link>https://www.theregister.co.uk/2019/04/05/eu_inc_domains/</link>
													<pubDate>5th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Nodeal Brexit would be catastrophic farmers warn</title>
													<section>Administrative Fall Out</section>
													<author>Sky News</author>
													<description>
													The National Farmers Union says confidence levels among British farmers are at their lowest since the start of the decade. Cereal farmers have told Sky News leaving the EU without a deal would be catastrophic and the continued uncertainty is having a huge cost to business. Unlike some livestock farming arable farmers have not been offered any protection against cheaper imports and also face the prospect of an increase in export tariffs</description>
													<link>https://news.sky.com/story/no-deal-brexit-would-be-catastrophic-farmers-warn-11684345</link>
													<pubDate>5th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Home Office makes 2m a month from child citizenship fees as parents driven into debt</title>
													<section>Administrative Fall Out</section>
													<author>The Independent</author>
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													The Home Office makes 2m a month from child citizenship fees figures show as campaigners warned charges are driving parents into debt and even forcing them to skip meals. Data obtained through a freedom of information request by community organising group Citizens UK reveals the department is raking in 24m a year  or around 500000 a week  on charges for children to register for British citizenship. That is the equivalent of 71429 each day  The cost of a citizenship application for a child is 1012 while cost of processing is 372. This means Home Office makes an estimated 640 profit from each child application it receives. All the fees are nonrefundable so are not returned if the application fails.  </description>
													<link>https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/home-office-child-citizenship-british-fees-debt-uk-a8855316.html</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Cornish daffodils left to rot from lack of eastern European workers due to Brexit</title>
													<section>Administrative Fall Out</section>
													<author>Cornwall Live</author>
													<description>
													The lack of manpower has been described as a devastating blow for the daffodil picking industry which generates around 45m a year for the UK economy. Britain is by far the worlds largest producer of daffodils with about 75 per cent grown in Cornwall.</description>
													<link>https://www.cornwalllive.com/news/cornwall-news/cornish-daffodils-left-rot-lack-2716754</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Dig deep to bloom after Brexit  Ireland</title>
													<section>Administrative Fall Out</section>
													<author>The Times</author>
													<description>
													Cashflow fears are taking root among Irish firms reliant on the UK but a rainy day fund will help to weather the storm</description>
													<link>https://www.thetimes.co.uk/edition/ireland/dig-deep-to-bloom-after-brexit-gjpcdq76d</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit plea over Scotlands perishable exports</title>
													<section>Administrative Fall Out</section>
													<author>BBC</author>
													<description>
													Scotlands transport secretary has called for timesensitive exports to be given priority in the event of a nodeal Brexit. Michael Matheson has written to his UK counterpart Chris Grayling asking for goods such as Scottish seafood to be given space on ferries. He warned that livelihoods were being put at risk by this lack of support for exporting businesses. The UK government said it was preparing for all possible Brexit outcomes. Mr Matheson claimed that the Department for Transport had failed to take action despite the issue being raised in previous correspondence from the Scottish government. He said said With an annual value of 944m seafood accounts for 58 of Scotlands total food exports. Seafood is highly perishable and therefore dependent on the sort of swift and reliable transport connections which would be damaged by a disorderly UK exit from the EU.</description>
													<link>https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-scotland-politics-47840566</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Small firms at Brexits sharp end</title>
													<section>Administrative Fall Out</section>
													<author>The Scotsman</author>
													<description>
													Well over one million UK SMEs around a quarter of the total were concerned about how Brexit would affect the success of their business. We also examined how Brexit uncertainty varies according to the size and location of companies and their business orientation. SMEs represent a core part of the UK economy accounting for 99 of all UK firms and 60 of total private sector employment. They are crucial for innovation and productivity growth and have disproportionately driven job creation since 2010. They are also particularly affected by institutional and political uncertainty and less resilient when it comes to unforeseen events such as Brexit. </description>
													<link>https://www.scotsman.com/business/ross-brown-and-john-os-wilson-small-firms-at-brexit-s-sharp-end-1-4903246</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Flextension and just tension in Brussels as UK requests another Brexit delay</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Politico.eu</author>
													<description>
													Its official Brexit doesnt mean Brexit. At least not on April 12. U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May formally appealed to the EU Friday for yet another extension of the U.K.s departure date perhaps until June 30. Or maybe until May 22. Or maybe sooner. The twoandahalf page letter to Council President Donald Tusk sparked alarm in Brussels. Significant concerns remain that the continued uncertainty poses a threat to the integrity of the European Parliament election and that a halfinhalfout U.K. could adopt a policy of future noncooperation that the EU would be unable to control. EU leaders still have not had an answer to the questions they asked when they delayed Brexit day last time What exactly would such an extension be for and how would it achieve a different outcome</description>
													<link>https://www.politico.eu/article/flextension-and-just-tension-in-brussels-as-uk-requests-another-brexit-delay/</link>
													<pubDate>8th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Labours Thornberry calls for Brexit inquiry</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Politico.eu</author>
													<description>
													Britain should hold an inquiry into how Brexit has been handled Labours Shadow Foreign Secretary Emily Thornberry said. When all this finishes we will need to look at how it happened Thornberry told a live taping of Politico EU Confidential podcast in London on Sunday. We will need to look at why it is that we spent billions of pounds on no deal. You know why David Cameron had a referendum without telling the civil servants to prepare in case he lost the referendum she said. And also frankly we will need to look at a lot of Cabinet minutes where they are discussing whats good for the Tory Party and not whats good for the country Thornberry said.</description>
													<link>https://www.politico.eu/article/uk-labours-emily-thornberry-calls-for-brexit-inquiry/</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Theresa May Invokes The Fireside Chat With StraightToCamera Brexit Plea</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Huffington Post UK</author>
													<description>
													Theresa May has adopted a new natural approach in an attempt to get her Brexit message across and shed her Maybot reputation after weeks of tumult. In what appeared to be a looselyscripted video message the Prime Minister made a plea for compromise on both sides as talks with Labour continued. May even forced a chuckle as she admitted that the public might be confused over why leaving the European Union has yet to happen almost three years after the referendum. She began by admitting people have been asking her what on earth is happening with Brexit as she was filmed on a shaky camera and with a large  tumbler of water placed in the foreground. Filmed at her Chequers country retreat May was in fireside chat mode an oftused political device made famous by radio addresses from US President Franklin Roosevelt in the 1930s. She addressed the ongoing talks with Jeremy Corbyn which she now appears to think are the only way out of the Brexit deadlock.</description>
													<link>https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/theresa-may-brexit-address_uk_5caa170ee4b0dca03302f61a</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Labours Thornberry demands referendum on any Brexit compromise</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Politico.eu</author>
													<description>
													Emily Thornberry the U.K. shadow foreign secretary demanded any Brexit deal between her party and the government be put to a second referendum as she suggested Labour MPs from Leavesupporting constituencies were misunderstanding their own voters. Speaking at a live taping of POLITICOs EU Confidential podcast in London on Sunday Thornberry said any deal agreed between Prime Minister Theresa May and Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn would prove controversial. The question will be  is this what anybody wants Or do we end up with a compromise that just makes everybody unhappy Thornberry said. I think whatever it is it will be controversial. And I think that in those circumstances its right for us to be saying to the British people During that referendum did you vote for this Do you want this When you said you wanted to leave did you want to leave like this</description>
													<link>https://www.politico.eu/article/uk-labours-emily-thornberry-demands-referendum-on-any-brexit-compromise/</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit news latest Eighty MPs write to Jeremy Corbyn calling for Peoples Vote guarantee</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Evening Standard</author>
													<description>
													Eighty Labour MPs have called on Jeremy Corbyn to secure a guarantee of a second referendum in any Brexit deal he reaches with Theresa May. The group which includes shadow ministers wrote to the Labour leader on Saturday and stated that a public vote should be the bottom line in the negotiations. The letter warns any concessions secured in the crossparty talks  which have so far failed to produce a breakthrough  cannot be guaranteed meaning a referendum is a necessary safeguard.</description>
													<link>https://www.standard.co.uk/news/politics/brexit-news-latest-eighty-mps-write-to-jeremy-corbyn-calling-for-peoples-vote-guarantee-a4111181.html</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Is there any way back from a Brexit cliff edge</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>ITV News</author>
													<description>
													Every option from a nodeal Brexit to a referendum or even revocation of the decision to leave leads to some combination of UK nations England versus Northern Ireland and Scotland or social groups to simplify nationalist lowincome Brexiters versus internationalist wealthier Remainers shouting treachery and betrayal. There is no Brexit peace to be had. For many years. Or at least none I can see. And that sure knowledge will condition how EU leaders decide on Wednesday whether and what postponement of the date we leave the EU to grant us. A nodeal Brexit on 12 April the current official Brexit date is not a de minimis probability. And nor is either parliament voting for a referendum or straightforwardly to revoke Brexit if MPs see the sole alternative to those desperate acts of evasive action as leaving the EU with no deal. But any of those outcomes would lead to different combinations of acute strife in politics economy society. Weve muddled though to a precipitate cliff edge  and we dont know which cliff it is and how steep the drop may be. Heaven help us.</description>
													<link>https://www.itv.com/news/2019-04-07/brexit-latest-theresa-may-extension-eu-emergency-summit-donald-tusk/</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Labour would consider very very strongly revoking Article 50 and forcing the UK to remain in EU</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Daily Mail</author>
													<description>
													Labour would consider very very strongly voting to revoke Article 50 and forcing the UK to remain a member of the EU if the alternative were the UK leaving the EU without a deal a shadow cabinet minister said today. Rebecca LongBailey shadow business secretary and part of Labours Brexit negotiating team said the move would be considered if an extremely damaging break from the bloc without an agreement was the other option. Pressed by Andrew Marr this morning on whether Labour would be prepared to revoke Article 50 cancelling Brexit if the UK was heading towards a nodeal Brexit on Friday she said We have promised our party members and our constituents that we will do all we can to avoid a nodeal situation and its something that we would consider very very strongly.</description>
													<link>https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6896083/Labour-consider-strongly-revoking-Article-50-forcing-UK-remain-EU.html</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Theresa May rules out fourth meaningful vote and nodeal Brexit as she prepares for customs union climbdown</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The Telegraph</author>
													<description>
													Theresa May has signalled she will not seek a fourth vote on her Brexit deal as she appeared to rule out the UK leaving the European Union without an agreement.
The Prime Minister said MPs had already rejected her divorce deal three times and as things stand I cant see them accepting it. She warned the choice was now between leaving the EU with a deal or not leaving at all as she seemed to finally ditch her long standing mantra of nodeal being better than a bad one. Mrs May said crossparty talks with Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn would continue in the hope of finding a compromise Brexit deal capable of winning the support of a majority of MPs.</description>
													<link>https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2019/04/07/theresa-may-rules-fourth-meaningful-vote-no-deal-brexit-prepares/</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Jeremy Corbyn is unfit to be PM says Jewish Labour Movement as it passes no confidence motion in him</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The Telegraph</author>
													<description>
													The Jewish Labour Movement have passed a motion of no confidence in Jeremy Corbyn and concluded he is unfit to be prime minister as the partys antiSemitism crisis worsened. The JLM accused Mr Corbyn and the Labour leadership of having fundamentally failed to address the problem and said a government led by him would not be in the interest of British Jews. The motion was passed almost unanimously at the groups annual general meeting despite a plea from a leading ally of the Labour leader not to personalise the issue.</description>
													<link>https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2019/04/07/jeremy-corbyn-unfit-pm-says-jewish-labour-movement-passes-no/</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit furious Tories will try to oust May if UK fights Euro elections</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													Theresa Mays mutinous MPs are warning her that they will move to oust her within weeks if the UK is forced to take part in European elections next month and extend its EU membership beyond the end of June. Tory MPs are increasingly angry at the prospect of voters being asked to go to the polls to elect MEPs three years after the Brexit referendum in an election they fear will be boycotted by many Conservatives and be a gift to the far right and Nigel Farages new Brexit party. Senior Tories said one silver lining of a long extension would be that it would allow them to move quickly to force May out and hold a leadership election starting as soon as this month.</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2019/apr/06/furious-tory-mps-will-bid-to-oust-may-if-uk-fights-euro-poll</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Amber Rudd poised to back Boris Johnson for Conservative leader</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The Times</author>
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													Amber Rudd is preparing to back Boris Johnson to be the next Tory leader after MPs approached her allies urging the work and pensions secretary to join a dream team alliance that they have dubbed BAmber. Rudd thinks Michael Gove is the most attractive candidate and Jeremy Hunt is best placed to succeed Theresa May. But she believes that Johnson is the one who can win a general election. Allies say Rudd will not make a public declaration about who she is supporting until the contest is under way after she moved early to back Johnson in 2016 only to see his campaign implode. </description>
													<link>https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/rudd-poised-to-back-boris-in-bamber-dream-team-g2cg0rq6d</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Andrea Leadsom nodeal Brexit next week would not be so grim</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													A nodeal Brexit at the end of next week would be not nearly as grim as many believe one of Theresa Mays senior ministers has said as both the government and Labour indicated that crossparty talks to resolve the situation remained deadlocked. Andrea Leadsom the Commons leader said preparations would mitigate many adverse effects of no deal. She also said the idea of a departure extension long enough to require the UK to hold European elections was utterly unacceptable. Her comments came as May used a video statement to talk up the hopes for ongoing crossparty Brexit negotiations with Labour saying compromise on both sides could still deliver a solution.</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/apr/07/andrea-leadsom-no-deal-brexit-next-week-would-not-be-so-grim</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Corbyn climbs aboard as May tries to save her sinking ship</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The Times</author>
													<description>
													It was a minister present remarked the saddest moment of cabinet. Theresa May her administration and reputation on the line laid out why she needed to change the governments Brexit policy despite making the ultimate sacrifice. I offered my resignation and still the deal didnt go through she said reflecting on the three crushing defeats her deal with Brussels had suffered at the hands of MPs.</description>
													<link>https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/corbyn-climbs-aboard-as-may-tries-to-save-her-sinking-ship-pqtgxfnn8</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Asking the impossible can Theresa May keep her Brexit deal alive</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													It is another week where Theresa May must make seemingly impossible demands of her cabinet her party Labour MPs and EU negotiators. By Wednesday the prime minister must present the European council with a credible reason for extending the UKs Brexit negotiating period once more  and every reason she could give is also one that could split her party at home. Labour sources are insistent they have not walked out of the negotiations but those close to the talks were amazed at how little appeared to actually be on offer from the government. If Yvette Coopers bill on extending article 50 passes its final hurdles in the House of Lords on Monday and gains royal assent parliament will be given time to decide what length of extension May should request.</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/apr/07/asking-the-impossible-can-may-keep-her-brexit-deal-alive</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Sinn Fin will contest Norths EU elections  McDonald</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>RTE.ie</author>
													<description>
													The Sinn Fin President Mary Lou McDonald has said her party will contest European Parliament elections in Northern Ireland if they are held as a result of a long Brexit extension.  Speaking in Dublin she said If an election happens we will fight the election. We are ready.  She said irrespective of whatever outcome there is to Brexit Sinn Fin wanted to ensure that ... promises made to Ireland over our peace process economy and people will be protected.  Deputy McDonald said she was going to meet the British Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn in London tomorrow to discuss Brexit. </description>
													<link>https://www.rte.ie/news/brexit/2019/0406/1041074-sinn-fein-european-elections/</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit Germanys CDU leader hopes for second referendum</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>BBC</author>
													<description>
													I no longer care so much how Brexit ends you often hear. As long as it ends.
Brexit has been a strain on all of us. In some ways it has paralysed us Annegret KrampKarrenbauer told me in Berlin in a UK exclusive interview. Shes the leader of Germanys CDU party very close to Angela Merkel and widely tipped to be the next German chancellor. Ms KrampKarrenbauer  also known as AKK  is far from detached when it comes to Brexit. She and a number of other German politicians penned a letter to the Times newspaper back in January appealing to the UK to change its mind. Now the EUs determined attempt to show unity at all times over Brexit means it has been frustratingly difficult to get EU leaders to agree to indepth ontherecord Brexit interviews .</description>
													<link>https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-47822843</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Prime Minister poised to bind Britain into the customs union</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Daily Mail</author>
													<description>
													Theresa May was last night poised to mount a humiliating climbdown over a customs union as the price of winning Labour support for her Brexit deal. According to senior sources Tory negotiators have told Labour that the Government would accept UK membership of a customs union  a red line for Brexiteers  but on condition that they call it something else to avoid inflaming anger among Eurosceptic Conservatives. It is understood that Jeremy Corbyn has also been offered a lock mechanism which would prevent any future proBrexit Prime Minister such as Boris Johnson from unravelling the deal by having it written directly into legislation.</description>
													<link>https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6894465/Prime-Minister-poised-bind-Britain-customs-union.html</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Oh do look at the tinpot Brexiters having their moment in the spotlight</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													Sick of Brexit Yeah me too. Partly because it becomes clearer with each chaotic day that for some of the secondtier Brexit ultras no one much cares about Mark Francois Steve Baker Andrew Bridgen Bernard Jenkin et al this is the most attention theyve ever had and are ever likely to get in their sad blustering selfimportant lives. While its Remainers who are supposed to be the soppy drama queens just look at this bunch  flapping about the media mouthbreathing through their cameratime sparkly eyed with their own significance. Brexit as a debilitating national crisis Hardly. Theyve never felt so</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/apr/06/tin-pot-brexiters-having-their-moment-in-the-sun-mark-francois</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Theresa May bids to save deal with a Borisproof Brexit</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The Times</author>
													<description>
													Theresa May is preparing to offer Jeremy Corbyn a legally binding soft Brexit deal with a Boris lock that would make it difficult for a future Eurosceptic prime minister to tear up after she leaves No 10. In a lastditch attempt to leave the EU this year Mays team is drawing up plans to enshrine in law a guarantee that MPs would have the ultimate say on a final deal with Brussels. Senior figures in Downing Street will tell Tory MPs that they face a stark choice  accept a rebranded customs union with Brussels or lose Brexit. Crossparty talks stalled on Friday after Labour complained that May was not prepared to rewrite the political declaration with Brussels which maps out what Britain wants from the second phase of negotiations. But in a sign that May is prepared to soften her approach Philip Hammond the chancellor said the government had no red lines left.</description>
													<link>https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/f990f3be-58ac-11e9-a28c-4153b1332dc6  </link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Attempt to secure delayed departure from EU could leave UK on course for nodeal Brexit senior lawyer warns</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The Telegraph</author>
													<description>
													An attempt by Parliament to direct Theresa Mays attempts to secure a delayed departure from the EU could in fact leave the UK on course for a nodeal exit a senior lawyer has suggested. Lord Pannick a leading QC said provisions in a bill drawn up by Sir Oliver Letwin and Yvette Cooper could damage attempts to reduce the chances of the UK leaving the EU without a withdrawal agreement.
The barrister together with Lord Judge the former Lord Chief Justice are planning to table an amendment to the legislation on Monday which would restore powers for Mrs May to negotiate a new exit date with EU leaders on Wednesday if they reject the June 30 cutoff that she has proposed. </description>
													<link>https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2019/04/07/attempt-secure-delayed-departure-eu-could-leave-uk-course-no/?li_source=LI&amp;ampli_medium=li-recommendation-widget</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit Majority of public now back Final Say referendum amid chaos in Westminster poll shows</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The Independent</author>
													<description>
													Most of the British public now back having a Final Say referendum on Brexit whatever the outcome eventually is an exclusive poll for The Independent has found. Amid the chaos in parliament backing for a new public vote which has simmered just below 50 per cent for months finally broke through into a majority in April according to the BMG Research survey. Major players in both main parties have signalled that a referendum could be the way forward including chancellor Philip Hammond and shadow foreign secretary Emily Thornberry.</description>
													<link>https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/brexit-final-say-eu-referendum-peoples-vote-poll-a8857211.html</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>May says choice between leaving EU with deal or no Brexit  The Observer</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Reuters</author>
													<description>
													Prime Minister Theresa May said there was now a clear choice between Britain exiting the European Union with a deal or not leaving at all as she tries to find a compromise with the opposition Labour Party The Observer newspaper reported.
Because parliament has made clear it will stop the UK leaving without a deal we now have a stark choice leave the European Union with a deal or do not leave at all May was quoted as saying by the newspaper. The longer this takes the greater the risk of the UK never leaving at all.</description>
													<link>https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-britain-eu-may-observer/may-says-choice-between-leaving-eu-with-deal-or-no-brexit-the-observer-idUKKCN1RI0MK</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Corbyn  Im waiting for May to move Brexit red lines</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Reuters</author>
													<description>
													Prime Minister Theresa May has yet to move the red lines that have blocked a deal for Britain to leave the EU opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn said on Saturday after May launched talks with him in a lastditch bid to save Brexit. Im waiting to see the red lines move he told the BBC. I hope we can reach a decision in parliament this week which will prevent a crashing out. No talks have been arranged yet between the two sides for this weekend a Labour source told Reuters. Mays decision to seek an agreement with Corbyn was an astounding reversal after months of saying her plan for Brexit was the only possible course. It reflects weeks of high drama in parliament that saw Mays deal rejected by a historic majority but no agreement emerge on an alternative plan.</description>
													<link>https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-britain-eu/corbyn-im-waiting-for-may-to-move-brexit-red-lines-idUKKCN1RI0IK</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>UK PM May has plan to offer Labour Brexit customs arrangement</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Reuters</author>
													<description>
													British Prime Minister Theresa Mays government has a plan to enshrine in law a customs arrangement with the European Union in a bid to win over the opposition Labour Party to back a Brexit deal The Sunday Times newspaper reported. Under the new plan the prime minister would offer to rewrite the governments withdrawal bill to enshrine a customs arrangement in law the newspaper said. May is trying to win over the main opposition party after her negotiated Brexit deal was voted down by parliament on three occasions.</description>
													<link>https://www.reuters.com/article/us-britain-eu-customs/uk-pm-may-has-plan-to-offer-labour-brexit-customs-arrangement-sunday-times-idUSKCN1RI0NI</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>ProEuropeans must unite around the opportunity of the EU elections</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Financial Times</author>
													<description>
													One is that Brexit has fomented in Britain the biggest proEuropean movement on the entire continent of Europe 6m people signed a petition to revoke Article 50 hundreds of thousands perhaps more marched. A second is that no matter what form of Brexit is chosen  if one is ever agreed  the UK is likely to continue following EU law. The twoyear transition period which Mrs May has negotiated in the withdrawal agreement requires it. For both reasons elections to choose British MEPs seem like a good idea we must ensure democratic accountability over an organisation we are still tied to at least for the time being. </description>
													<link>https://www.ft.com/content/652f2416-56d1-11e9-8b71-f5b0066105fe</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Theresa May rules out nodeal Brexit in lastditch push for Tory votes</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>New Statesman</author>
													<description>
													Theresa May has explicitly ruled out a nodeal Brexit for the first time in what Conservative MPs are interpreting as a lastditch attempt to win support ahead of a fourth vote on her Brexit deal. The Prime Minister warns this evening Because Parliament has made clear it will stop the UK leaving without a deal we now have a stark choice leave the European Union with a deal or do not leave at all. My answer to that is clear we must deliver Brexit and to do so we must agree a deal.</description>
													<link>https://www.newstatesman.com/politics/uk/2019/04/theresa-may-rules-out-no-deal-brexit-last-ditch-push-tory-votes</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit extension veto by EU unlikely says Leo Varadkar</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>BBC</author>
													<description>
													It is unlikely an EU 27 country will veto a UK request for a delay to Brexit the Irish prime minister has said. Leo Varadkar said a country wouldnt be forgiven if it vetoed an extension as that decision would cause hardship to Ireland and other EU countries. The UK is set to leave the EU on 12 April but a deal has not been approved by Westminster.</description>
													<link>https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-47838925</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit I had no choice but to approach Labour  May</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>BBC</author>
													<description>
													Prime Minister Theresa May has insisted she had to reach out to Labour in a bid to deliver Brexit or risk letting it slip through our fingers. The PM said there was a stark choice of either leaving the European Union with a deal or not leaving at all.
And shadow business secretary Rebecca LongBailey says if nodeal became an option Labour would consider very very strongly voting to cancel Brexit. Some Tories have criticised the PM for seeking Labours help on her deal. Commons Leader Andrea Leadsom said the Tories were working with Labour through gritted teeth adding that no deal would be better than cancelling Brexit.</description>
													<link>https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-47842572</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Merkel throws May a lifeline over UKs Brexit departure date</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													Angela Merkel is open to backing Theresa Mays request for a short Brexit extension as the German chancellor seeks to maintain the pressure on British MPs to support the withdrawal agreement according to senior EU sources. In the face of moves from elsewhere in the EU to insist on a longer delay to Britains departure Merkel is keeping all options on the table ahead of this weeks EU summit and is said to be willing to back 30 June as an exit date. She is thought to be concerned that Donald Tusks proposal of a yearlong extension with an option to exit earlier on ratification of the withdrawal agreement could be selfdefeating.</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/apr/06/merkel-may-lifeline-brexit-departure-date-withdrawal-agreement</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Now the British public is fully aware of the consequences of Brexit its clear they want a Final Say</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The Independent</author>
													<description>
													But even if there was some grand LabCon coalition on Brexit it would still need the approval and consent of the British people. There are forces pushing to give the UK little if any room for manoeuvre led by President Emmanuel Macron who has apparently picked up support in Belgium and Spain. This threatens a rapid nodeal Brexit even if the British government and parliament have outlawed it. That French tactic will probably not be enough to stop Chancellor Merkel exercising good sense and backing Mr Tusk but it is a risk. Therefore the choice may very soon  next week  be between the UK crashing out of the EU with no deal and no transition period or revoking Article 50 unilaterally and staying in the EU.</description>
													<link>https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/editorials/final-say-brexit-second-referendum-no-deal-theresa-may-donald-tusk-a8858191.html</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Second Brexit vote would be ultimate betrayal leader of lower UK parliament</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Reuters</author>
													<description>
													 A second public vote on Britains membership of the European Union would be the ultimate betrayal Andrea Leadsom the leader of the House of Commons or lower house of parliament wrote in the Sunday Telegraph newspaper.</description>
													<link>https://www.reuters.com/article/us-britain-eu-leadsom-idUSKCN1RI0N0</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit blamed for poisonous atmosphere in the Senedd</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>BBC</author>
													<description>
													Brexit has been blamed for creating a poisonous atmosphere in the Senedd by a number of AMs. Plaid Cymrus Leanne Wood said there has been a noticeable deterioration in the Welsh Assembly with exchanges there less civilised. Labours Llanelli AM Mr Waters believes this a reflection of the division in broader society caused by Brexit. It follows almost three years of heated debate in the House of Commons around the UKs exit from the EU.</description>
													<link>https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-politics-47840953</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>UKs May says greater risk of no Brexit the longer it takes to find compromise</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Reuters</author>
													<description>
													British Prime Minister Theresa May said on Saturday that the longer it takes to find a compromise with the opposition Labour Party to secure a parliamentary majority for a Brexit deal the less likely it is that Britain will leave the European Union.</description>
													<link>https://ca.reuters.com/article/topNews/idCAKCN1RI0NO-OCATP</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Welsh Lib Dem leader presses case for new Brexit poll</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>BBC</author>
													<description>
													There must be a new referendum on any Brexit deal the leader of the Welsh Liberal Democrats has insisted. Jane Dodds told party supporters We demand a Peoples Vote and we will not waver in our stand. Ms Dodds who took on the role in 2017 also said Wales has the expertise to be a world leader in green energy technology. She was speaking at the partys spring conference that took place in Cardiff on Saturday. In her speech Ms Dodds said the Liberal Democrats were at the heart of a movement of millions to give the people the final say on the deal.</description>
													<link>https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-politics-47807984</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Opinion Amid the chaos of Brexit Scotland is a beacon of sense in a sea of madness</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Irish Independent</author>
													<description>
													As the parliament in Westminster continues its descent into anarchy you could be forgiven for thinking that British politics has reached a state of such utter dysfunction that it may never recover. Thank God then for Scotland which  in an increasingly lunatic world  looks like it will emerge from the morass of Brexit with its dignity intact. There is no denying that those most aggressively seeking Scottish independence have seized on Brexit as a powerful propaganda weapon to advance their cause. While that is certainly true it does a disservice to Nicola Sturgeon and her administration to suggest that advancing Scottish independence is the only reason that they have so vigorously fought to stop Brexit.</description>
													<link>https://www.independent.ie/regionals/enniscorthyguardian/news/opinion-amid-the-chaos-of-brexit-scotland-is-a-beacon-of-sense-in-a-sea-of-madness-37973117.html</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>UK Labour leader waiting for government Brexit red lines to move</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Reuters</author>
													<description>
													Britains Labour Party is waiting for the governments Brexit red lines to move after talks with the governing Conservatives aimed at ending the deadlock opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn said on Saturday according to the BBC. Corbyn said he is waiting to see the red lines move in talks with the government and next week something will have to happen in parliament according to a BBC reporter on Twitter. Earlier finance minister Philip Hammond said the government had no red lines in the talks.</description>
													<link>https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-britain-eu-labour/uk-labour-leader-waiting-for-government-brexit-red-lines-to-move-bbc-idUKKCN1RI0F6</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Theresa May and Jeremy Corbyns plot to thwart Boris Johnson from delivering clean Brexit by setting their unity deal in stone</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The Sun</author>
													<description>
													Theresa May is plotting to thwart Boris Johnson from delivering a clean Brexit if he becomes the next PM. She has bowed to Jeremy Corbyns demands to make any unity deal they strike legally binding. And in a message to voters last night she insisted that doing business with her Marxist foe was the only way to stop Brexit slipping through our fingers. But writing the compromise into law would tie the hands of her successor  and make it impossible for them to rip up the agreement and start again. The move has infuriated Tory MPs who want her to quit No10 as soon as she has led Britain out of the EU. They fear she will crumble to Labour demands to keep Britain in a customs union  a move which is fiercely opposed by leadership hopeful Mr Johnson.</description>
													<link>https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/brexit/8808245/theresa-may-jeremy-corbyn-boris-johnson-brexit-unity-deal-law/</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>UK minister sees Brexit deal with Labour opposition wants flexibility</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Reuters</author>
													<description>
													The British government is optimistic about reaching some form of deal with the opposition Labour Party to end a deadlock on Brexit as work on a compromise continues Britains finance minister Philip Hammond said on Saturday. But Labour said the governing Conservatives needed to be more flexible and had not shown any movement on a political declaration of intent on the future relationship between London and Brussels once Britain has left the European Union.</description>
													<link>https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-eu-britain-hammond/uk-minister-sees-brexit-deal-with-labour-opposition-wants-flexibility-idUKKCN1RI04D</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit crisis Labour disappointed by talks as EU offers flextension</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Sky News</author>
													<description>
													Labour has accused the government of failing to offer real change or compromise during talks to end the Brexit stalemate  as new exit dates are considered. In a statement following more talks between the opposition and a team appointed by Theresa May to agree a way forward shadow Brexit secretary Sir Keir Starmer said So far the government isnt proposing any changes to the deal. In particular its not countenancing any changes to the actual wording of the political declaration.</description>
													<link>https://news.sky.com/story/brexit-crisis-government-has-failed-to-compromise-during-talks-say-labour-11685156</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>European governments dismiss Theresa Mays 30 June Brexit delay request</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Politics Home</author>
													<description>
													European governments have criticised Theresa Mays request for a Brexit extension until 30 June warning that the UK could end up leaving the EU without a deal.  Amelie de Montchalin the French Europe minister said that the UK could not continue to ask for extensions without clear and credible political backing. In the absence of such a plan we would have to acknowledge that the UK chose to leave the EU in a disorderly manner she continued. Spain and Belgium are also thought to back Frances hardline stance paving the way for a nodeal Brexit on 12 April.
However at a meeting of diplomats from the other 27 member states the German insisted There are positive elements to the letter.</description>
													<link>https://www.politicshome.com/news/uk/foreign-affairs/brexit/news/103081/european-governments-dismiss-theresa-mays-30-june-brexit</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>France Spain and Belgium ready for nodeal Brexit next week</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													Chance of May getting 30 June extension appear slim after notes of EU meeting emerge. France has won the support of Spain and Belgium after signalling its readiness for a nodeal Brexit on 12 April if there are no significant new British proposals according to a note of an EU27 meeting seen by the Guardian. The diplomatic cable reveals that the French ambassador secured the support of Spanish and Belgian colleagues in arguing that there should only be at most a short article 50 extension to avoid an instant financial crisis saying We could probably extend for a couple of weeks to prepare ourselves in the markets.</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/apr/05/france-spain-and-belgium-ready-for-no-deal-brexit-next-week</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>The Peoples Vote campaign is about Brexit not patching up broken parties</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													Peoples Vote sprang from Open Britain  an amalgam of people passionate about the benefits of being in the EU horrified at the referendum result and determined to mitigate the various harms Brexit will cause our country. This diverse coalition brought Caroline Lucas of the Green party and Dominic Grieve of the Conservatives to the same table it united grass roots campaigns such as More United and Scientists for EU and campaigners of every political hue. In time we agreed the only way out of the growing Brexit crisis was a Peoples Vote.</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/apr/05/peoples-vote-brexit-labour-party-anna-soubry</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Dominic Grieve hosts French minister for Brexit discussions on Article 50 and second referendum</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The Telegraph</author>
													<description>
													Remain Tory MPs will meet on Thursday with senior members of Emmanuel Macrons government to discuss extending Article 50 as a path to a second referendum The Telegraph can reveal. Dominic Grieve the former Attorney General will hold a meeting with Nathalie Loiseau the French Europe minister and other senior French politicians in his office. It came as Nick Boles and Oliver Letwin two Tory MPs pushing for a softer Brexit held a meeting with Jeremy Corbyn to discuss their plans.</description>
													<link>https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2019/03/06/exclusive-dominic-grieve-hosts-french-minister-discussions-article/</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>France maintains hardline stance on nodeal Brexit</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													France has reiterated its opposition to Britain being granted any further Brexit extension if it does not have a concrete plan with clear support in the House of Commons saying that without that Britain must be deemed to have chosen to leave the EU without a deal.</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/apr/05/france-maintains-hardline-stance-on-no-deal-brexit</link>
													<pubDate>5th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>The EU should offer a long Brexit extension so the UK can rethink</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Financial Times</author>
													<description>
													The EU should say no to Theresa Mays request to delay Brexit until the end of June. It is too short an extension to be useful. Instead the 27 other countries should say she can have a delay of a year  with the option to end it earlier if she gets a deal through parliament. The UK prime minister probably knows that such a yearlong flextension is in the national interest. She just couldnt bring herself to ask for it because she is worried about causing yet more uproar in her Conservative party. Every delay to Brexit drives the hardline MPs mad. But that is no reason for the leaders of the EU27 to go along with a proposal that is bad for them too. They should make a counteroffer just as they did last month when Mrs May asked for her first extension to the Article 50 process. Then they gave her less time than she wanted. Now they should give her more. </description>
													<link>https://www.ft.com/content/70c54f54-5798-11e9-8b71-f5b0066105fe</link>
													<pubDate>5th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>May asks for Brexit extension to June 30 EU could offer a year</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Reuters UK</author>
													<description>
													Britains opposition Labour Party said on Friday that talks with the government on a lastditch Brexit deal had made no progress as EU leaders said Prime Minister Theresa May had not convinced them that they should let Britain delay its departure next week. May wrote to Brussels asking European Union leaders to postpone Britains exit from next Friday until June 30. But they have insisted that she must first show a viable plan to secure agreement on her divorce deal in the deadlocked parliament. Labour which she turned to reluctantly after failing three times to get her deal passed said the government has not offered real change or compromise in three days of talks. We urge the prime minister to come forward with genuine changes to her deal a statement said.</description>
													<link>https://in.reuters.com/article/uk-britain-eu/may-asks-for-brexit-extension-to-june-30-eu-could-offer-a-year-idINKCN1RH0NF</link>
													<pubDate>5th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit Theresa May asks for June 30 extension but EU wants year long flextension</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Daily Mirror</author>
													<description>
													Mr Tusk is preparing to put the option to EU leaders at a crunch summit next Wednesday in a bid to prevent the UK crashing out of the bloc on April 12 according to the BBC. Mrs Mays request was sent this morning to spell out the UKs plans in a letter to Mr Tusk in sufficient time for the other 27 leaders to consider them before they gather in Brussels on Wednesday evening. A source close to the French President has already slammed talks of granting a further delay as premature. The French diplomatic source slammed as clumsy comments by an EU official mentioning a flexible extension of the date of the countrys exit from the European Union of up to one year. Under the EUs plan the UKs nominal last day would likely be 10 April 2020  but would be expected to leave well before then when a deal is agreed.</description>
													<link>https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/politics/brexit-theresa-asks-june-30-14238812</link>
													<pubDate>5th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Donald Tusk will tell EU to back Brexit flextension for UK</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													Theresa May has written to Donald Tusk to ask for Brexit to be delayed until 30 June while she battles to win crossparty agreement on a way forward. Rather than the yearlong flexible extension to article 50 recommended by the European council president the prime minister suggested 30 June as the new departure date but with an option to leave earlier if the necessary legislation has been passed. That is the same date requested by the government last month but rejected by EU leaders in Brussels. Unless a new date is signed off at an emergency EU summit on Wednesday Britain is due to leave without a deal on 12 April.</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/apr/05/donald-tusk-will-tell-eu-to-back-brexit-flextension-for-uk?ref=hvper.com</link>
													<pubDate>5th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>The Best Brexit Is Still No Brexit</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Bloomberg</author>
													<description>
													With or without Mays withdrawal agreement Brexit will be a prolonged process involving years of further negotiation debate lawyering rulewriting beancounting politicking infighting and generalized tedium. It will be costly complicated and socially corrosive. Avoiding Brexit altogether is still the best way forward even if it means further delay and the costs that go with it. The right result is possible even now if Britains politicians finally start putting the countrys interests first.</description>
													<link>https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2019-04-05/despite-may-s-talks-with-corbyn-the-best-brexit-is-no-brexit</link>
													<pubDate>5th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Donald Tusk floats 1year Brexit flextension</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Politico</author>
													<description>
													Britain can have another year to think on Brexit  provided it joins the European Parliament election next month a senior EU official said. European Council President Donald Tusk raised the idea after hours of meetings and consultations Thursday to plan for next weeks summit of EU leaders. The only reasonable way out would be a long but flexible extension the senior official quoted Tusk as saying. I would call it a flextension. How would it work in practice We could give the U.K. a yearlong extension automatically terminated once the Withdrawal Agreement has been accepted and ratified by the House of Commons. </description>
													<link>https://www.politico.eu/article/eu-brexit-flextension-plan/</link>
													<pubDate>5th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Theresa May begs Brussels to delay Brexit to June 30  but EU want it to be a year</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The Sun</author>
													<description>
													Theresa May today wrote to Brussels begging for another delay to Brexit keeping us in the EU for three more months. The PM asked EU leaders to sign off on a new agreement which would see Britain leave on June 30  but theyre likely to push for a yearlong extension instead. The delay is likely to include a break clause meaning it would end early if Parliament approves a Brexit deal. But furious Brexiteers warned that if the EU forces us to stay another year Britain should sabotage it from the inside by blocking plans for expansion.</description>
													<link>https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/brexit/8797094/theresa-may-letter-eu-corbyn-brexit-delay-deal/</link>
													<pubDate>5th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit UK asks EU for further extension until 30 June</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>BBC</author>
													<description>
													Theresa May has written to the European Union to request a further delay to Brexit until 30 June. The UK is currently due to leave the EU on 12 April and as yet no withdrawal deal has been approved by MPs. The government has been in talks with the Labour Party to try and find a compromise to put to the Commons. But shadow Brexit secretary Sir Keir Starmer said the Tory negotiating team had offered no changes to Mrs Mays original deal. </description>
													<link>https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-47825841</link>
													<pubDate>5th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Why Labours Brexit talks with Government are on verge of collapse</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>ITV News</author>
													<description>
													I am not sure whether its me or ministers who are the more naive. Because last night I was persuaded by Cabinet sources a breakthrough was nigh in talks to resolve the Brexit deadlock between the Government and Labour. But the talks are already on the verge of collapse  with each side making charges it is the other side which is negotiating in poor faith. Labour sources say the memorandum sent by the PM to Jeremy Corbyn this afternoon shows Theresa May has not shown the flexibility her colleagues expected.</description>
													<link>https://www.itv.com/news/2019-04-05/why-labours-brexit-talks-with-government-are-on-verge-of-collapse/</link>
													<pubDate>5th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Travel after Brexit EU parliament votes to give UK citizens visafree access after nodeal  if its reciprocated</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>iNews</author>
													<description>
													The European Parliament voted in support of plans that will allow UK nationals to carry on enjoying visafree travel across the European Union after Brexit as long as the same is reciprocated by London to all member states. MEPs backed the proposals by 502 to 81 with 29 abstentions in a vote in Brussels on Thursday. The legislation means UK nationals will not require visas to stay in the EU for up to 90 days in any 180day period. The legislation should be incorporated into EU law by 12 April the extended final date for the end of the Article 50 process when the UK finally leaves the EU. It will continue to apply even in the event of a nodeal Brexit.</description>
													<link>https://inews.co.uk/news/brexit/travel-after-brexit-no-deal-visa-eu-parliament-uk-citizens-travelling-what-will-happen/</link>
													<pubDate>4th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Mays deal has sacrificed services as price of ending free movement</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The Times</author>
													<description>
													It would be far better for the government to use any extension to rethink its strategy in favour of an approach based on honesty and evidence rather than subterfuge. After all the Irish backstop may have exposed one giant hole in Mrs Mays plan relating to treatment of goods. But there are other important holes in the governments Brexit plans that continue to go almost entirely unexamined. Perhaps the biggest relates to the treatment of services.</description>
													<link>https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/mays-deal-has-sacrificed-services-as-price-of-ending-free-movement-5mjtsmj76</link>
													<pubDate>4th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Scottish Conservatives urged to split from UK party</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The National</author>
													<description>
													A call is being made to the Scottish Conservative conference next month urging it to split from the UK party and set up as a separate organisation. It follows tensions between the UK and Scottish party over Brexit and the prospect a hardline Eurosceptic such as Boris Johnson could succeed Theresa May as Prime Minister.</description>
													<link>https://www.thenational.scot/news/17548763.scottish-conservatives-urged-to-split-from-uk-party/</link>
													<pubDate>4th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit Leo Varadkar and Angela Merkel to hear views of people from Northern Ireland</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The News Letter</author>
													<description>
													Irish premier Leo Varadkar will hold Brexit talks with German leader Angela Merkel in Dublin today. The Taoiseach will host Ms Merkel at Farmleigh House where their discussions are set to focus on the latest developments ahead of the special European Council meeting next week.</description>
													<link>https://www.newsletter.co.uk/news/brexit-leo-varadkar-and-angela-merkel-to-hear-views-of-people-from-northern-ireland-1-8877030</link>
													<pubDate>4th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Second Brexit vote would be ultimate betrayal </title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>Reuters</author>
													<description>
													A second public vote on Britains membership of the European Union would be the ultimate betrayal Andrea Leadsom the leader of the House of Commons or lower house of parliament wrote in the Sunday Telegraph newspaper. The ultimate betrayal would be a second referendum wrote Leadsom a Brexiteer. It would require lengthy delay it would reignite the divisive debate and since Parliament has so far failed to follow the first result there is no reason to believe it would honour a second referendum either.</description>
													<link>https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-britain-eu-leadsom/second-brexit-vote-would-be-ultimate-betrayal-andrea-leadsom-idUKKCN1RI0N1</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>The Guardian view on no deal Theresa May must expose it as a fantasy</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													There are too many Tories calling for no deal on the basis that the EU will not let us be stupid enough to do it. This is irresponsible gambling. The danger of no deal might have receded but the threat of nodealism as an ideological frame for looking at the UKs relations with Europe is alive and well. It needs rebutting and it needs rebutting by the prime minister. The few remaining grownups in the Tory party need to take on the ambitious colleagues who will say anything to appeal to the fanatical leaver grassroots who in the absence of a general election will choose the next prime minister. Even if her very worst decision was to deploy the language she used about no deal her second worst may have been to trigger a leadership contest where the winner will be chosen by those who believed her rhetoric.</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/apr/07/the-guardian-view-on-no-deal-theresa-may-must-expose-it-as-a-fantasy</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>MP Owen Paterson lobbied government for firm he worked for</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													A former cabinet minister helped to lobby the government to seek contracts for a multinational firm he is paid to advise. Owen Paterson a former environment secretary and leading proBrexit campaigner is paid nearly 100000 a year by Randox a private forensic testing firm to act as a consultant. Whitehall documents obtained by the Guardian show that Paterson and Randox lobbied the Department for International Development to secure contracts from the department.</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/apr/07/mp-owen-paterson-lobbied-government-for-firm-he-worked-for</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>MPs ordered to cut out on hurling clickbait insults at each other in bid to return Brexit debate to normal</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The Sun</author>
													<description>
													Hysterical MPs have been ordered to cut out the insults and show more respect to their colleagues. Senior figures are alarmed by the angry and offensive language used by politicians on social media TV radio and in the Commons. They fear fury and fatigue stoked up by Brexit has spawned a new era of clickbait conduct and madeforTwitter soundbites. Former Education Secretary Nicky Morgan has called for them to adopt a calmer tone. She has drawn up a new code of conduct for the 50strong One Nation Caucus of MPs in a bid to return normal debate to the airwaves. Some MPs are stressed and on the brink of collapse as tempers fray over the longrunning and divisive Brexit process. Last week Tory exminister Mark Francois launched a blistering attack on Chancellor Philip Hammond telling him Up yours.</description>
													<link>https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/brexit/8808882/mps-ordered-stop-insulting-each-other/</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Oh do look at the tinpot Brexiters having their moment in the spotlight</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													Sick of Brexit Yeah me too. Partly because it becomes clearer with each chaotic day that for some of the secondtier Brexit ultras no one much cares about Mark Francois Steve Baker Andrew Bridgen Bernard Jenkin et al this is the most attention theyve ever had and are ever likely to get in their sad blustering selfimportant lives. While its Remainers who are supposed to be the soppy drama queens just look at this bunch  flapping about the media mouthbreathing through their cameratime sparkly eyed with their own significance. Brexit as a debilitating national crisis Hardly. Theyve never felt so</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/apr/06/tin-pot-brexiters-having-their-moment-in-the-sun-mark-francois</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit is slipping away May in urgent warning UK heading for second referendum</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>Express.co.uk</author>
													<description>
													It comes as Theresa May today warns that unless Parliament can get a deal over the line in the next week then there is a strong possibility of Brexit not happening at all. With talks between Mrs May and Jeremy Corbyns teams ongoing it is understood that yesterday SAT saw progress towards an agreement. But the Sunday Express has learnt that former Vote Leave ground teams have been asked to start getting their operations together again in preparation of a second vote by former Vote Leave officials.</description>
													<link>https://www.express.co.uk/news/politics/1110816/brexit-news-EU-deal-UK-theresa-may-second-referendum</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>British manufacturers want Theresa May to revoke Article 50 if no Brexit deal is agreed</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>iNews</author>
													<description>
													Two thirds of the UKs leading manufacturing lobby group members back a straight revocation of Article 50</description>
													<link>https://inews.co.uk/news/brexit/british-manufacturers-want-theresa-may-to-revoke-article-50-if-no-brexit-deal-is-ageed-on/</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>I was a strong Brexiteer. Now we must swallow our pride and think again</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>Open Democracy</author>
													<description>
													Its nearly three years since I along with 17. 4 million other Britons voted for Brexit. Today I have to admit that the Brexit project has gone sour. Brexit has paralysed the system. It has turned Britain into a laughing stock. And it is certain to make us poorer and to lead to lower incomes and lost jobs. We Brexiteers would be wise to acknowledge all this. Its past time we did. We need to acknowledge too that that we will never be forgiven if and when Brexit goes wrong. Future generations will look back at what we did and damn us. So I argue as a Brexiteer that we need to take a long deep breath. We need to swallow our pride and think again. Maybe it means rethinking the Brexit decision altogether.</description>
													<link>https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/opendemocracyuk/i-was-strong-brexiteer-now-we-must-swallow-our-pride-and-think-again/</link>
													<pubDate>7th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Liam Fox joked that Emmanuel Macron was sleeping with his grandmother after Brexit extension block</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>Daily Mail</author>
													<description>
													Liam Fox was at the centre of a dirty tricks row last night over claims he joked about French President Emmanuel Macron sleeping with his grandmother. Onlookers say the International Trade Secretary made the remark as he emerged from last Tuesdays marathon Cabinet meeting which backed Mrs Mays decision to try to seal a Brexit deal with Jeremy Corbyn.</description>
													<link>https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6894471/Liam-Fox-joked-Emmanuel-Macron-sleeping-grandmother-Brexit-extension-block.html</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Conservative candidate compares Remainers to people who voted for Nazis</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The Independent</author>
													<description>
													A Conservative candidate standing in city council elections in Nottingham has reportedly compared the millions of Remainers who have signed the petition to revoke Article 50 to those who voted for the Nazi party. Carl Husted has deleted the Facebook post made about antiBrexit campaigners along with a series of other recent comments on Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn. Yet the remarks which Mr Husted called jokes were screengrabbed and published by The Nottingham Post.
The petition to revoke Article 50 now has the same number of signatures as the number of people who voted for Hitlers Nazi party in 1930 Germany he wrote on 3 April. Although Hitler didnt have the benefit of petition signing bots and signatures from North Korea Syria Russia etc. So not quite as popular as 1930s nazism but edging closer. godwinslaw.</description>
													<link>https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/conservative-candidate-brexit-remainers-nazis-nottingham-carl-husted-a8856351.html</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Sky Views Britain too busy for global role because of Brexit crisis</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>Sky News</author>
													<description>
													.It is instead an example of how the protracted Brexit crisis is impacting on the UKs ability to do anything else particularly on the foreign policy front. A chunk of Foreign and Commonwealth Office staff are engaged in a range of Brexitrelated preparations and contingency planning in case of a nodeal instead of their normal diplomatic day jobs. A summit of NATO prime ministers and presidents will still take place this anniversary year  in December  but this time the venue will be the UK not the US a mark of the Britains status as a global power provided the country is not still consumed by Brexit.</description>
													<link>https://news.sky.com/story/sky-views-britain-too-busy-for-global-role-because-of-brexit-crisis-11686445</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Greens warn Labour will never be forgiven if they usher in Brexit</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The New European</author>
													<description>
													Jeremy Corbyn has been told his party may never be forgiven if it works with the Conservatives to bring in a hardright Brexit. That was the warning from Scottish Green coconvener Patrick Harvie as he told party activists to get into campaign mode in case the UK takes part in European Parliament elections next month.</description>
													<link>https://www.theneweuropean.co.uk/top-stories/greens-warn-labour-will-never-be-forgiven-for-helping-make-brexit-happen-1-5981912</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Germany once pleaded with Britain to stay in the EU. Now the love has cooled</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>CNN</author>
													<description>
													Brexit is one big sshow German MP Michael Roth Germanys Minister for European Affairs said on Saturday. I say that now very undiplomatically. I dont know if even William Shakespeare could have come up with such up a tragedy like this one. Who will foot the bill in the end Roth continued to say that 90 of the MPs in the British government dont even know how workers think how they live work and behave. But they have managed to upend everything. And now someone else is going to have to take responsibility for their actions.</description>
													<link>https://edition.cnn.com/2019/04/06/europe/germany-britain-brexit-relationship-gbr-intl/index.html</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Labour chairman attacks Corbyn over peoples vote on Brexit</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													Jeremy Corbyn was warned by Labour party chairman Ian Lavery that he risked going down in history as the leader who split his party if he backed another referendum on Brexit in an extraordinary outburst during a meeting of the shadow cabinet last week according to senior party sources. The outburst stunned shadow cabinet members who said it would have sparked a fullscale shouting match if MPs had not been called to vote at the very moment he made his intervention. At the same meeting several senior figures including shadow home secretary Diane Abbott and deputy leader Tom Watson spoke out in favour of Labour backing a confirmatory referendum on any deal agreed by MPs with remaining in the EU as the alternative on the ballot paper.</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2019/apr/06/labour-chairman-attacks-corbyn-over-second-referendum-plan</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Britains Brexit struggles become campaign rhetoric in Poland</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The Washington Post</author>
													<description>
													Polands opposition coalition launched its campaign for next months European Parliament elections with a threat Polands ruling party could lead the nation toward its own Brexit. Polish citizens have an overwhelmingly favorable view of the European Union. According to a Pew Research Center study from last month 72 percent have a favorable view of the E.U. and 54 percent have a favorable view of the European Parliament  the highest of any country surveyed. Polands Law and Justice party which came to power in 2015 has never actually floated the idea of leaving the E.U. Nevertheless Law and Justice is sometimes referred to as a Euroskeptic party.</description>
													<link>https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2019/04/06/britains-brexit-struggles-become-campaign-rhetoric-poland/</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Philip Hammond deepens Tory civil war after claiming there are no red lines in Brexit negotiations with Labour</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The Telegraph</author>
													<description>
													Philip Hammond has risked deepening the civil war in his party after suggesting the Government has no red lines in its Brexit negotiations with Jeremy Corbyn. In a bid to save the talks from collapsing the Chancellor said he was optimistic ministers would be able to reach an agreement with Labour and should be open to listen to suggestions. However his intervention has provoked a furious backlash among Brexiteers who accused him of deliberately touting his own view and attempting to push Theresa May into signing up to a customs union.</description>
													<link>https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2019/04/06/philip-hammond-deepens-tory-civil-war-claiming-no-red-lines/</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>EU slaps down Jacob ReesMogg for suggesting UK should deliberately cause chaos if Brexit is delayed</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The Independent</author>
													<description>
													Brussels has slapped down Jacob ReesMogg after the leading Brexiteer suggested the UK should wilfully cause chaos at the EU institutions if Brexit was delayed. A spokesperson for the European Commission suggested that the Tory MP was essentially irrelevant and not involved in negotiations. This gentleman is not our interlocutor and I would say then that the principle of sincere cooperation does apply as prime minister May herself makes clear in her letter the spokesperson told reporters in Brussels. I would also say that this is a hypothetical question because it supposes or presupposed an extension which is yet to be seen by our leaders. Guy Verhofstadt the European parliaments Brexit coordinator also piled in. Seizing on Mr Moggs comments he said For those in the EU who may be tempted to further extend the Brexit saga I can only say be careful what you wish for.</description>
													<link>https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/eu-jacob-rees-mogg-tweet-uk-disruption-brexit-delay-a8856326.html</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Tory MP says joining in EU elections would be existential threat to party</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													The education minister Nadhim Zahawi told BBC Radio 4s Today programme I think its important that parliament acts quickly now to decide what it is in favour of. We need to do that quickly because I think going into the EU elections for the Conservative party or indeed for the Labour party and telling our constituents why we havent been able to deliver Brexit I think would be an existential threat. I would go further and say it would be the suicide note of the Conservative party.</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/apr/06/tory-mp-nadhim-zahawi-says-joining-in-eu-elections-would-be-conservative-party-suicide-note</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>European Parliament elections A quarter of public would boycott poll</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>Sky News</author>
													<description>
													A quarter of the public say they would boycott European Parliament elections if they happen in the UK in May a Sky Data poll reveals. Some 26 of Britons say they would sit out elections in protest while 47 say they would vote in them and 17 admit they would not vote in them anyway. A higher proportion say they would vote than turned out in the 2014 EU elections in the UK  36 of potential voters turned out five years ago though usually more claim they will get to the ballot box than actually do so.</description>
													<link>https://news.sky.com/story/european-parliament-elections-a-quarter-of-public-would-boycott-poll-11685011</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>A shambles on which the sun never sets how the world sees Brexit</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													Rapt observers around the globe are confused amused and saddened by a crisis that has torn Britains reputation for stability to shreds</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/apr/06/a-shambles-on-which-the-sun-never-sets-how-the-world-sees-brexit</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit Majority of public now back Final Say referendum amid chaos in Westminster poll shows</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>Yahoo!</author>
													<description>
													The survey of a weighted sample of more than 1500 people in early April asked Would you support the British public having the final vote on Brexit whatever the outcome of negotiations  whether a deal is reached or not Some 52 per cent of people supported a new vote 29 per cent strongly and 23 per cent somewhat while just 24 per cent opposed to some degree having another referendum. The remaining 24 per cent replied Dont know.</description>
													<link>https://uk.news.yahoo.com/brexit-majority-public-now-back-184609038.html </link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Nigel Farage Ill stand in European elections  but Im not happy about it</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>Sky News</author>
													<description>
													Nigel Farage has confirmed he will stand in the EU elections if the UK hasnt left the bloc but says he is not happy about it. The Brexit Party leader told Sky News he would lead his new party into the elections next month after Theresa May said she would begin contingency plans for holding the votes as she requested another extension to Article 50.</description>
													<link>https://news.sky.com/story/nigel-farage-ill-stand-in-european-elections-but-im-not-happy-about-it-11684817</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>EU issues no deal no meal Brexit threat to British fish and chips</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The Telegraph</author>
													<description>
													Britain could face a crippling shortage of fish and chips the national dish if there is a no deal Brexit EU officials warned yesterday. As things stand EU boats will lose access to British waters and vice versa if there is a no deal Brexit on April 12.  
Brussels wants Britain to agree a shortterm emergency fix giving the EU fleet guaranteed access to British waters until 2019. But that could prove politically toxic for the prime minister who has promised to make Britain as an independent coastal state and Britain has given no formal signal to the EU over its intentions. An EU official said that Britain could soon run out of white fish such as haddock and cod which are the most popular...</description>
													<link>https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2019/04/05/eu-issues-no-deal-no-meal-brexit-threat-british-fish-chips/</link>
													<pubDate>6th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>May is seeking a short extension to Brexit. How utterly contemptuous</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													The truth is that the last five months have been  by far  the worst in modern British politics. Because of May. From the moment that she pulled the vote on her withdrawal agreement because she knew that our democratic institutions would not consent to it she has consistently placed her own narrow interests above those of this country. She has ignored and misled parliament. She has acted as a demagogue giving licence to those who threaten and harass MPs. She has burned bridges with our European partners and has treated the British people with contempt.</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/apr/05/may-extension-brexit-demagogue-people-britain</link>
													<pubDate>5th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>UK in Disarray  Amid Brexit Chaos Theresa Mays Conservative Party Implodes</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>Der Spiegel</author>
													<description>
													The Conservative Party was once seen as Europes bestoiled political machine. But Brexit and Theresa May have turned it into a smoldering wreck. Now the party faces the dire prospect of EU elections. It was a small group of Conservatives blinded by nationalism that brought on the referendum in the first place. It is that same group that has also ensured that every attempt to bring Brexit to a conclusion  any conclusion really  has failed miserably. Yet it was only on Tuesday evening almost three years after the referendum that Theresa May made her first desperate attempt to free herself from the hardliners by offering to meet with Labour to find a joint way out of the chaos. It could very well be that May will be able to pull her country back from the brink at the very last second. But for her party it may already be too late.</description>
													<link>http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/amid-brexit-chaos-theresa-may-s-conservative-party-implodes-a-1261489.html</link>
													<pubDate>5th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Week in Review Theresa Mays only consistency is failure</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>Politics.co.uk</author>
													<description>
													What a fulltime 247 everydayincludingChristmas moral abyss she is. The prime minister has spent the last three years insisting that holding a second referendum would destroy peoples trust in the democratic process. And this is how she behaves. This is how she treats elections. As something to be dismissively engaged in and then cast aside like a bogey you cant flick off your fingers. She really is absolutely shameless. There is no competition anymore there is no question She is quite simply the worst British prime minister of our lifetime and quite possibly of anyone elses.</description>
													<link>http://www.politics.co.uk/blogs/2019/04/05/week-in-review-theresa-may-s-only-consistency-is-failure</link>
													<pubDate>5th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit is finished. A Leave constituency just voted in a Remain MP</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>Daily Mirror</author>
													<description>
													Only a handful of lunatics still want Brexit  its game over gammons. The more extreme Brexit becomes  the more a screaming Stephen YaxleyLennon puts himself at the head of the marches the more Mark Francois behaves like an angry Sunday roast on the evening news  the less appealing it is to the vast majority of Britons. Combine that with the unappealing facts that the IRA has been reactivated the NHS is stockpiling toilet rolls like the rest of us and Parliament is officially answering dont know to all questions asked of it then we ought to have a country thats falling to pieces. Instead if Newport West is a barometer of these things weve got a country that just cant be arsed with this any more.</description>
													<link>https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/politics/brexit-finished-leave-constituency-just-14240090</link>
													<pubDate>5th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>UKIP councillors post on remainers repugnant says council leader</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>BBC</author>
													<description>
													A UKIP councillor has sparked a row over a Facebook post describing EU remain voters as traitors who should face the death penalty. Swale Borough councillor Padmini Nissangas online post has been described as appalling and repugnant.
At a council meeting on Wednesday it was revealed all opposition members had received printed copies of the post. Council leader Roger Truelove is calling for her name to be removed from ballot papers for the local elections. Ms Nissanga posted the comments on Facebook in August and opposition councillors recently received screenshots in their pigeonholes the Local Democracy Reporting Service said.
Mr Truelove of Labour is calling for Ms Nissanga a UKIP councillor for the Sheppey East ward to be taken off the ballot paper for the local elections in May if the post is verified by council officers.</description>
													<link>https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-kent-47824367</link>
													<pubDate>5th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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