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										<title>News from the Brexit Cliff Edge - 15th Apr 2019</title>
										<date>15th Apr 2019</date>
										<description></description>
										<link>https://nfind.uk/brexit_cliff_edge/index.php/newsletter=46</link>
										<copyright>brexit_cliff_edge</copyright>
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													<title>Brexit British Steel seeks 100m government loan to meet EU rules</title>
													<section>Jobs at Risk</section>
													<author>BBC</author>
													<description>
													British Steel is seeking a 100m loan from the government in order to meet EU emission rules. Previously the company could have used EUissued carbon credits to settle its 2018 pollution bill. However the steel maker has been affected by a European Union decision to suspend UK firms access to free carbon permits until a Brexit withdrawal deal is ratified. The company is in talks with Department for Business about financial help. The Department for Business Energy and Industry Strategy told the BBC As the business department we are in regular conversation with a wide range of sectors and companies. British Steel has until 30 April to comply with EU emission rules.</description>
													<link>https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-47921375</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Dangerous products could swamp UK after Brexit warns Which</title>
													<section>Administrative Fall Out</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													The public will be at risk from delays in identifying unsafe goods if the UK leaves European safety system. Dangerous cars electrical goods and toys could flood into the UK after Brexit unless the government urgently reforms the current failing safety enforcement system a consumer group warned on Monday. Which says the public will be vulnerable to delays in spotting and dealing with unsafe products unless continued access to the European Safety Gate system is negotiated. Its new analysis shows the scheme under which 31 European countries alert each other to products with serious safety problems issued 34 more notifications in 2018 than a decade ago</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/apr/15/dangerous-products-could-swamp-uk-after-brexit-warns-which</link>
													<pubDate>15th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>EXCL Home Office reports itself to data watchdog after Settled Status emails breach</title>
													<section>Administrative Fall Out</section>
													<author>Politics Home</author>
													<description>
													The Home Office has been forced to report itself to data watchdogs after it accidentally shared the emails of hundreds of EU citizens applying to stay in the UK after Brexit.</description>
													<link>https://www.politicshome.com/news/uk/home-affairs/immigration/news/103196/excl-home-office-reports-itself-data-watchdog-after</link>
													<pubDate>14th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>A major bridge is closed indefinitely because no one can pay to fix it. Welcome to modern Britain</title>
													<section>Administrative Fall Out</section>
													<author>iNews</author>
													<description>
													One of the major arteries into our capital was rammed due to the closure for safety reasons of Hammersmith Bridge one of the few Thames crossings. Its closed indefinitely because apparently noone can afford to repair it.</description>
													<link>https://inews.co.uk/opinion/hammersmith-bridge-closure-crumbling-infrastructure/</link>
													<pubDate>14th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>A curse on Brexit and those who created this crisis  Joyce McMillan</title>
													<section>Administrative Fall Out</section>
													<author>The Scotsman</author>
													<description>
													Another dangerous corner another handbrake swerve another delay to Brexit and I guess I am not the only Remain supporter now looking forward to the next seven months with relief yes but also with a sense of absolute dread. Already almost before the new flexible Brexit extension has been announced the sound of people digging themselves further into their entrenched positions is loud in the land. </description>
													<link>https://www.scotsman.com/news/opinion/a-curse-on-brexit-and-those-who-created-this-crisis-joyce-mcmillan-1-4906070</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit How the new delay has hit four businesses</title>
													<section>Administrative Fall Out</section>
													<author>BBC</author>
													<description>
													It was an earlyhour announcement that allowed many of the UKs business owners to finally get a few hours of restful sleep. In Brussels on Thursday the EU granted the UK a sixmonth extension thus eliminating the immediate threat of a nodeal Brexit. But for companies that have been preparing for a sudden exit it was no more than a temporary reprieve. Its a bit of uncertainty that isnt helpful says Andrew Graham. His 70yearold company Graham and Brown Wallpaper has been stockpiling raw materials for months at its factory in Blackburn. Quite frankly we could do with knowing where were going he told the BBC.</description>
													<link>https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-47902542</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Drugmakers Stockpiling for Brexit Ask How Long Do We Wait</title>
													<section>Administrative Fall Out</section>
													<author>Bloomberg</author>
													<description>
													Bracing for possible border delays in the event of a messy nodeal Brexit pharma companies are trying to ensure the steady flow of vital medicines to patients. After U.K. and European Union leaders agreed to push Brexit back to the end of October drugmakers are sharing the pain of another six months of uncertainty thats hitting British companies across the board. How long are we going to be overstocked said Hugo Fry managing director of French drugmaker Sanofis U.K. business. Theres a certain level of balance sheet pressure that comes into play. How long do we wait In theory the European Union could give another extension.
Among other Brexit preparations Sanofi has augmented its U.K. supplies to about 16 weeks on average. If principal routes are disrupted the French drugmaker will have to fly its flu vaccine into the U.K. a costly step Fry said. Novo plans to keep stockpiles at roughly 18 weeks while it has pushed back access to space that it reserved on airplanes to move its products.</description>
													<link>https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-04-13/drugmakers-stockpiling-for-brexit-ask-how-long-do-we-wait</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit Welsh resorts to benefit from EU exit uncertainty</title>
													<section>Administrative Fall Out</section>
													<author>BBC</author>
													<description>
													Holidaymakers look set to embrace staycations in Wales this year as Brexit sparks nervousness about European holidays tourism chiefs say. The Easter holidays were due to be the first break after Britain left the European Union before the government delayed the initial 29 March deadline. Tourism bosses say the weak pound and uncertainty could add to the 10 million annual overnight trips to Wales.
The Wales Tourism Alliance is positive there will be a Brexit bounce.</description>
													<link>https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-47897427</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Biggest UK tulip grower stockpiles bulbs over Brexit</title>
													<section>Administrative Fall Out</section>
													<author>BBC</author>
													<description>
													The UKs biggest outdoor commercial tulip grower has said it has been stockpiling bulbs as uncertainty over Brexit continues. Belmont Nurseries near Kings Lynn said the future of the UKs relationship with the European Union EU was a cause of major concern. Were very much UK based but we do also sell to Europe nursery director Mark Eves said. If the lorry is held up at port for any length of time the bulbs simply wont get the fresh air they need blown across them during transport which means they wont flower  basically theyd be ruined. The EU has granted the UK a sixmonth extension eliminating the immediate threat of a nodeal Brexit.</description>
													<link>https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-norfolk-47912881</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Calais boss lets loose Brexit voters given WRONG information  Brussels is a necessity</title>
													<section>Administrative Fall Out</section>
													<author>Express.co.uk</author>
													<description>
													JeanMarc Puissesseau who is also deputy mayor of the French city revealed his frustrations to Express.co.uk within Calais over Brexit saying he was not sure how an extension would help when the UK has already had three years to negotiate. He accused Brexiteers of giving UK voters the wrong information which led them to vote Leave in the 2016 EU referendum. As he revealed Port Boulogne Calais new 6million 5.17million facilities which have been set up as part of preparations for a no deal Brexit the French boss said he was surprised at Britains decision to unshackle itself from the bloc because Europe is a necessity.</description>
													<link>https://www.express.co.uk/news/politics/1112948/brexit-news-calais-port-no-deal-brexit-latest-Jean-Marc-Puissesseau-theresa-may</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Why Brexit has driven thousands back to their allotments</title>
													<section>Administrative Fall Out</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													Even though the threat of a nodeal Brexit receded last week  until October at least  I hope that our interest in allotments wont do the same. Its use them or lose them and periods of indifference lead to allotment provision being chipped away usually irreversibly as they are filled in with new housing developments. What this last couple of years shows is that crises will always come along and that when they do we turn to allotments and to our ability to grow our very own basil spring greens spinach sage and lavender.</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2019/apr/13/how-brexit-made-the-allotment-cool-again</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Incompetent selfinterested s Fear and loathing on the doorstep over Brexit</title>
													<section>Administrative Fall Out</section>
													<author>Sky News</author>
													<description>
													We are struggling to get anyone to deliver leaflets even members of our executive dont want to go out. This theme of Conservatives being unable to turn out their own members was commonplace across the country. One exasperated Tory councillor told me Every association Ive spoken to are struggling to get their members out. Members are saying why should I get s on the doorstep and doors slammed in my face when Im as angry as they are</description>
													<link>https://news.sky.com/story/brexit-backlash-party-activists-fear-hostility-could-turn-sinister-11691211</link>
													<pubDate>12th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit continues to impact the UK housing market</title>
													<section>Administrative Fall Out</section>
													<author>Property Wire</author>
													<description>
													Demand from buyers remained in negative territory in March and sales and new property coming on to the market continued to decline according to the latest residential market survey from the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors RICS.
Respondents still envisage a modest improvement in activity 12 months ahead but modest fall in house prices at a UK level are expected over the next couple of quarters although the regional picture remains mixed. The market report also shows that in March enquiries from new buyers saw the eighth negative reading in a row with 27 of respondents seeing a fall in buyer demand and that demand falling across all parts of the UK</description>
													<link>https://www.propertywire.com/news/uk/brexit-continues-to-impact-the-uk-housing-market/</link>
													<pubDate>12th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Exclusive Jeremy Corbyn Handed Remain Reform Rebel Manifesto For European Elections</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Huffington Post UK</author>
													<description>
													Calls for Jeremy Corbyn to back remain at the European elections have intensified as a strongly proEU manifesto penned by leftwingers was passed to the Labour leader.  Titled Remain Reform Rebel the document was penned by Corbyn allies including his execonomic advisor Ann Pettifor and has been endorsed by every sitting Labour MEP set to contest their seat should the Brexit deadlock trigger the May 23 poll. It demands an EUwide Green New Deal  similar to that advocated in the US by Democrat politician Alexandria OcasioCortez  to include a European supergrid and pledges to make the continent 100 served by renewables by 2050. </description>
													<link>https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/exclusive-jeremy-corbyn-handed-remain-reform-rebel-draft-manifesto-for-euro-elections_uk_5cb1fc71e4b098b9a2d44fd0</link>
													<pubDate>14th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit Crossparty talks testing ideas says Lidington</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>BBC</author>
													<description>
													The government and Labour are testing out each others ideas as they try to resolve the Brexit deadlock cabinet minister David Lidington has said. He told the BBC they had a fair bit in common over future customs objectives but further compromise was needed. While there was no deadline he said the sides would take stock in 10 days and the process could not drag out.</description>
													<link>https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-47924023</link>
													<pubDate>14th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>UKs Lidington says Brexit talks with Labour to continue will not last months</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Reuters</author>
													<description>
													The British governments talks with the opposition Labour party on a Brexit compromise will continue but will not drag out for months Cabinet Office minister David Lidington told the BBC on Sunday. Theyre not going to go on for months theyre certainly going to continue next week Lidington said. I dont think this question can be allowed to drag out for much longer I think the public rightly wants politicians to get on and deal with it.</description>
													<link>https://www.reuters.com/article/us-britain-eu-lidington-idUSKCN1RQ08Z</link>
													<pubDate>14th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Peoples Vote campaigners vow to overhaul project fear image</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													More than 80 said Brexit had turned out to be much more complicated than we were told in the referendum. The report concluded that a new proEU campaign must address the underlying causes of the 2016 leave vote and offer credible solutions as well as avoiding overinflated rhetoric. Most importantly it must reject a project fear narrative and make a positive case the report found a tactic that was castigated by everyone we spoke to it remains a complete turnoff to voters. It found that voters simply do not believe that leaving the European Union will cause immediate and significant harm to them and their families and that any new campaign should be centred on the positive difference the EU can make to jobs and rights.</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/apr/14/future-remain-campaign-will-be-better-than-in-2016-say-mps</link>
													<pubDate>14th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>The Observer view on giving voters their say on Brexit</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The Observer</author>
													<description>
													Now there is a firm deal it would be unthinkable for parliament to ratify it without putting it back to voters particularly given the gulf between what they were promised and what has been achieved. The reality of Brexit with all its tough tradeoffs  and the fact that there is no way of achieving a clean break from the EU that respects the Good Friday agreement  is embodied in Mays withdrawal agreement. The idea that voters should not get a say on the terms and conditions of the most important postwar decision facing Britain is preposterous. If the merits of that principled argument are not in themselves enough to convince the pragmatic case becomes stronger with each passing week there is clearly no other resolution to this gridlock in sight. Before the European elections Labour will have to decide whether it is in favour of a soft Brexit compromise or confirmatory referendum.</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/apr/14/observer-editorial-need-to-give-voters-their-say</link>
													<pubDate>14th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Alyn Smith European elections are Scotlands big chance to shine</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The National</author>
													<description>
													Along with my team  Laura Adam Clyn Ciarn and Patrick  weve had a fair bit of personal uncertainty to navigate as well I should have been unemployed on March 29 then again on Friday yet somehow have survived and face next week my last Strasbourg session having already given my last speech where I asked them to leave a light on for us. Ive had more goodbye gigs than the Rolling Stones.</description>
													<link>https://www.thenational.scot/news/17572112.alyn-smith-european-elections-are-scotlands-big-chance-to-shine/</link>
													<pubDate>14th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Learning from referendum failure is key to success says leading Remain figure</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													A future campaign to keep Britain in the European Union will face defeat unless it learns the lessons of the first failed Remain campaign one of its leading figures has warned. Andrew Cooper a Tory peer and David Camerons former pollster said that the dry economic projections of the Remain campaign had been easily dismissed as project fear while advocates of EU membership failed to make an emotionally resonant or positive case for staying in. Cooper makes the plea for a different strategy in the event of a second referendum in a new report by the Peoples Vote campaign as it attempts to find a way of convincing voters that staying in the EU would actually help deal with some of the underlying reasons for the original vote to leave.</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/apr/14/remainers-learn-2016-referendum-lessons-or-face-defeat-second-vote</link>
													<pubDate>14th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Of course the Tories dread Euro elections. They will be marmalised</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													Our Opinium poll suggests that the Tories are heading for a marmalising so bad that it is without historical precedent. Among voters who say they are certain to participate in the elections only 17 choose the Conservatives. This poll doesnt claim to be a precise prediction of what will happen at the end of May but it does point to a shockingly bad outcome for the Tories. This vote share is six points down on their previous record low in Euro elections which was in 2014. The sage of electoral history David Cowling tells me that the Conservatives have never scored as badly as 17 in any UKwide election from 1832 onwards. No wonder the Tories are desperate to avoid these elections. This they could do but only by ensuring that Britain has exited the EU before polling day a task that the government has repeatedly proved incapable of fulfilling.</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/apr/14/of-course-tories-dread-euro-elections-they-will-be-marmalised</link>
													<pubDate>14th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Lets use this time to push the case for a Yes vote</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The National</author>
													<description>
													Nicola Sturgeon says wait and the Greens along with others say now is the time.
If this is what the wider Yes movement believe than why not use this waiting period to keep the conversation going If we use this time productively we can win the argument before the date of the next independence vote. Now is the time to talk with listen to and work out ways of persuading those not fully convinced of independence for whatever reason. To be truthful I think much depends on how the SNP vote at their spring conference on the independence discussions on a Scottish currency and the adoption of the Growth Commission.</description>
													<link>https://www.thenational.scot/news/17573321.lets-use-this-time-to-push-the-case-for-a-yes-vote/</link>
													<pubDate>14th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit news latest Chancellor Philip Hammond says second referendum very likely to be put to Parliament again</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Evening Standard</author>
													<description>
													The Chancellor has said the idea of a second Brexit referendum is very likely to be put before Parliament again. Philip Hammond said on Friday that he hoped MPs would pass a deal by the end of June breaking the Brexit deadlock. He added that there was a good chance of a breakthrough in talks with the Labour party. I remain optimistic that over the next couple of months we will get a deal done Mr Hammond told reporters in Washington where he is attending meetings at the International Monetary Fund.</description>
													<link>https://www.standard.co.uk/news/politics/brexit-news-latest-chancellor-philip-hammond-says-second-referendum-very-likely-to-be-put-before-mps-a4117041.html</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>The Conservatives are stuck in a Brexit bedlam that they cant seem to find a way out of</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The Independent</author>
													<description>
													The Parliamentary Conservative Party notoriously has two default settings complacency or panic. The pressure of the Brexit process has moved the dial significantly towards the latter although one should never underestimate the capacity of Jeremy Corbyns leadership skills to encourage Conservatives into the former. For anyone who thinks longterm though the departure of colleagues with stinging remarks about destroying the Conservative Party should be worrying. </description>
													<link>https://www.independent.co.uk/news/long_reads/brexit-conservative-party-future-latest-damian-green-policy-may-david-cameron-a8856626.html</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit Exposes Painful Disconnect Between England and Britain</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Bloomberg</author>
													<description>
													The EnglandBritain split can be traced back to the Blair governments election in 1997 on a commitment to parcel out powers.</description>
													<link>https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-04-12/brexit-exposes-painful-disconnect-between-england-and-britain</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit delay Halloween extension feels like the final nail in Theresa Mays coffin</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Sky News</author>
													<description>
													It was the weekend after Theresa Mays disastrous snap general election in 2017 that former chancellor George Osborne rather brutally described the prime minister as a dead woman walking. Fitting then that the EU27 have agreed to a Halloween Brexit  setting 31 October as the new deadline for the UK to leave the EU with a review point in June  given it is this Article 50 extension that could finally kill off her premiership.</description>
													<link>https://news.sky.com/story/brexit-delay-halloween-extension-feels-like-the-final-nail-in-theresa-mays-coffin-11690256</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>UK government puts nodeal Brexit contingency plans on hold</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Financial Times</author>
													<description>
													Contingency plans to cope with a nodeal Brexit have been put on hold by the government as the risk of the UK crashing out of the EU without an agreement has subsided. Whitehall officials confirmed on Friday that Operation Yellowhammer  a national strategy aimed at preventing a run on food fuel and the banking system in the event of a nodeal Brexit  had been paused by the government. The government has spent 2bn on plans to mitigate the effects of the UK crashing out of the EU without an agreement and thousands of civil servants were assigned to the project. Businesses have also spent substantial sums to cope with the scenario.
But the government has relaxed its contingency plans after EU leaders on Thursday agreed to push back the date of Brexit to as late as October 31. </description>
													<link>https://www.ft.com/content/5f58ebfe-5d38-11e9-9dde-7aedca0a081a</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Amidst the Brexit chaos MPs are on the verge of mental breakdown</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Wired.co.uk</author>
													<description>
													Louise Rubins job usually involves lobbying parliamentarians and arranging campaigns to promote good mental health legislation. Until this week when Rubin saw various newspaper articles about the collective mental breakdown in parliament. Rubin read stories about MPs crying in the toilets of rapid weight loss and weight gain and of a general feeling of utter exhaustion. Most MPs of course attributed the stresses and strains to the neverending turmoil of the Brexit process. Thats when we decided it was time to step in and offer our support and advice Rubin says. Mind sent a letter to all 650 MPs providing them advice on how to best manage their wellbeing. Rubin called this a lowlevel intervention. We cant solve the Brexit crisis she says. Were only suggesting people are aware of their mental health and seek help if they do need to.</description>
													<link>https://www.wired.co.uk/article/brexit-mental-health</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit has broken the system  prepare for a Europeanstyle realignment of politics</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The Telegraph</author>
													<description>
													Watching our exasperating Brexit dispute from the safe distance of Vienna where I was staying for the past month it struck me how strangely Europeanised our party politics has become with the prospect of it becoming even more so as our party system reconfigures. In one respect however we remain proudly uncontinental. Talking to Austrian friends about the great Brexit mess I detected along with a fair amount of Schadenfreude a sneaking admiration for the democratic theatrics that the House of Commons has been providing</description>
													<link>https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2019/04/13/brexit-has-broken-system-prepare-european-style-realignment/</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Bercow stays to kill off Brexit</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Daily Mail</author>
													<description>
													The source said The MPs have put him under huge pressure not to leave the Chair until Brexit is sorted. He is now unlikely to give any hint of his going until after the summer recess at the earliest  and may well wait to see if the new October 31 deadline is met before hanging up his boots. Ken Clarke  who John listens to more than any other MP  was a particularly decisive voice telling him that it was his duty to stay. </description>
													<link>https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6919475/Bercow-stays-kill-Brexit.html</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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																	<title>Brexit proEU parties in UK to use elections as soft referendum</title>
																		<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
																		<author>The Irish Times</author>
																		<description>
													</description>
																		<link>https://www.irishtimes.com/news/world/uk/brexit-pro-eu-parties-in-uk-to-use-elections-as-soft-referendum-1.3859930</link>
																		<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit proEU parties to use European elections as soft referendum</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													ProEU parties including the Liberal Democrats the Greens and the Independent Group will not form pacts or alliances at the forthcoming EU elections hoping to use the poll as a soft referendum to show a surge in support for remain. If no Brexit deal is passed by parliament the UK will be required to hold the poll on 23 May. The Lib Dems the mainstream party hoping to capitalise most on antiBrexit discontent has almost finalised its manifesto and plans a huge operation of ground campaigning targeting remain voters. We want to use the momentum from the locals which very few other parties will have as a springboard for European elections a party source said. Voters across all of Great Britain want to vote for a proremain party. Were going to give them all the chance to vote Lib Dem.</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/apr/13/pro-eu-parties-to-use-european-elections-as-soft-referendum</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit is losing its media support as Peoples Vote and Revoke grab the momentum</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>iNews</author>
													<description>
													These papers played a crucial role in 2016. Years of stories on Brussels bureaucracy and immigration set the scene for Vote Leaves Take Back Control campaign on Facebook. Todays UK news output is a drumbeat of Brexit stalemate and delay. It is corrosive to the Leave cause undermining the sense of empowerment felt by its supporters three years ago. The media momentum is now with Remainers. While the Brexit press once rallied readers with calls to break the status quo it is social media hashtags demanding a PeoplesVote or RevokeArticle50 that now benefit from a sense of taking action. There is a new Twitter hashtag RemainerNow for those who have switched sides. And it celebrates Oborne and Ferraris change of heart because it knows that peoples vote or not there are many who look to media opinion formers for their lead.</description>
													<link>https://inews.co.uk/opinion/columnists/brexit-losing-its-media-support-as-peoples-vote-and-revoke-grab-the-momentum/</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Sinn Fin select European election candidate as Northern Ireland prepares to vote despite Brexit</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Breaking News.ie</author>
													<description>
													Sinn Fin has confirmed that its current MEP in Northern Ireland will run again for her seat. Elections to the European Parliament are going ahead in May despite the United Kingdoms imminent exit from the European Union. Martina Anderson who has been one of Northern Irelands three MEPs since 2012 said she is proud to lead her partys team in Europe.</description>
													<link>https://www.breakingnews.ie/ireland/sinn-fein-select-european-election-candidate-as-northern-ireland-prepares-to-vote-despite-brexit-917536.html</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Britain can now change its mind about Brexit</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Financial Times</author>
													<description>
													Extra time however presents parliament  and the country  with an opportunity. Britain can change its mind about Brexit. MPs can and should agree to put any proposed settlement with the EU27 to a confirmatory referendum. The country could then be presented with the vote it was denied in 2016  a choice between Remain and the best deal that parliament considers available to Britain outside the union. The tradeoffs between prosperity and security and notional sovereignty would be there for all to see. The Kamikaze Brexiters who complain this would flout what they call the will of the people mistake democracy for the majoritarianism beloved of despots and demagogues. True democracy embeds the right of citizens to change their minds. As for Mr Macron he would surely join Ms Merkel and Mr Tusk in applauding a victory for Britains Europeans. </description>
													<link>https://www.ft.com/content/c68a235e-5ba5-11e9-939a-341f5ada9d40</link>
													<pubDate>12th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Can the Tories and Labour agree on Brexit</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>BBC</author>
													<description>
													Crossparty talks are continuing in Whitehall amid parliamentary deadlock over Theresa Mays Brexit deal. So what are the sticking points and can Labour and the Conservatives reach an agreement Public statements on the talks have tended to be bland ranging from constructive and serious to the slightly more negative We have some way to travel. Behind the scenes the prospect of a deal while difficult is not impossible. There is a big incentive for both sides to reach agreement the avoidance of next months European elections.</description>
													<link>https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-47911720</link>
													<pubDate>12th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Weary frustration and cynicism take hold in UKs Brexit heartland</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Financial Times</author>
													<description>
													Sunderland hosts the largest Nissan factory in Europe  one reason why its vote to leave caused so much attention. A good number of workers at the facility which employs 6000 people from across the northeast celebrated the referendum victory in 2016. But several leaving the plant on Thursday said there was real anxiety now about potential job losses. Nissan has already announced it will not produce a promised new sport utility vehicle at Sunderland partly because of concerns about future ties with the EU. Brexit needs to be sorted out properly. It is causing a lot of division and unrest said one Nissan employee smoking outside the plant who declined to give his name. The problem is that nobody seems to know what sorting it out means. </description>
													<link>https://www.ft.com/content/9dd2aef6-5d15-11e9-9dde-7aedca0a081a</link>
													<pubDate>12th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Britains postBrexit future is still shrouded in fog</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Financial Times</author>
													<description>
													Is six months long enough for everyone to calm down and think through the Brexit decision The day after the EU Council granted the UK an extension to the date on which we leave the bloc Prime Minister Theresa May still seemed bent on driving through a version of her deal as fast as possible. But the extra time will be worth having if it engenders more honesty about the tradeoffs at the heart of Brexit. Unless the true price of any eventual decision is fully understood by the public the blame game will never end. Without truth there will be no reconciliation  whichever way this goes. </description>
													<link>https://www.ft.com/content/cb76bcc2-5c74-11e9-9dde-7aedca0a081a</link>
													<pubDate>12th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Rory Stewart Brexit could kill moderate Conservatism</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>Prospect</author>
													<description>
													Shortly before the referendum I recall reading Matthew Parris in the Times arguing that a Leave vote would destroy moderate conservatism in this country. At the time this struck me as columnists hyperbole. This week however I met with prisons minister onenation Tory and the unlikely star salesman for Theresa Mays Brexit deal Rory Stewart and found him gripped with a very real fear that something like the Parris prediction could soon come to pass.</description>
													<link>https://www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/politics/rory-stewart-how-brexit-could-kill-moderate-conservatism-interview-profile-westminster</link>
													<pubDate>12th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>DUP holding Conservatives to ransom over Brexit Tory MP says</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>BBC</author>
													<description>
													A Conservative MP has accused the DUP of holding his party to ransom over Brexit. Shrewsbury MP Daniel Kawczynski said he would prefer the prime minister to call a fresh Westminster election rather than renew his partys confidence and supply arrangement with the DUP. Referring to the DUP Mr Kawczynski said he does not want the tail to wag the dog any longer.</description>
													<link>https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-47913254</link>
													<pubDate>12th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>MP Heidi Allen shaken to core by Brexit hate mail</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>BBC</author>
													<description>
													An MP who was sent death threats related to Brexit said the messages had shaken her to the core. Heidi Allen South Cambridgeshire MP and interim leader of the Independent Group was one of seven MPs targeted by Jarod Kirkman. It made her feel very vulnerable she said but did not cause her to question her role as an MP adding I will not be bullied. Kirkman has admitted sending malicious communications and awaits sentencing. Ms Allen who quit the Conservatives to join the Independent Group in February said Kirkmans threats were not the only abusive messages she had received.</description>
													<link>https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/660/cpsprodpb/122C/production/_106425640_capture.jpg</link>
													<pubDate>12th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Leavers should be demanding a new vote  Comment</title>
													<section>Political Shenanigans</section>
													<author>The Times</author>
													<description>
													The limbo in which we now sit until November and which everyone calls humiliating is a trial run for a Brino Brexit in name only Brexit. Adherence to the rules no United Kingdom veto no vote in the selection of European commissioners. Our first taste of vassalage and the response has not been encouraging. We keep the benefits of membership at the whim of the proper members of the EU and the twitch of a French presidents eyebrow. This humbling of Britain which the news media now lament mirrors the status to which those MPs and commentators who call themselves compromisers and reachersout those who would split the difference between Leave and Remain aim to reduce us. For the next six months we are ruletakers not rulemakers. Now we know what Theresa Mays implementation period and probably trapped by the Irish backstop beyond it will feel like.</description>
													<link>https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/leavers-too-should-demand-to-vote-again-wb32cz529</link>
													<pubDate>12th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Tories fall seven points behind Labour in new poll as support for Theresa Mays party plunges to lowest level in years</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>Evening Standard</author>
													<description>
													The Tories have plunged seven points behind Labour in a new opinion poll. The survey by Opinium shows Labour climbing one point to 36 per cent with the Conservatives dropping six points in the past two weeks to 29 per cent. Britain Elects a poll analysis service said it was the Tory Partys lowest rating in four years  but not as bad as its 23 per cent score in 2013. It comes after a week in which Conservative Brexit divisions resulted in open Commons mutiny against Prime Minister Theresa May with hardliner Bill Cash calling for her to resign.</description>
													<link>https://www.standard.co.uk/news/politics/tories-plunge-seven-points-behind-labour-in-new-opinion-poll-a4117411.html</link>
													<pubDate>14th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Jeremy Corbyn faces an interesting choice  will he demand that the people decide</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The Independent</author>
													<description>
													For many months Labours leaders have hedged and fudged and dodged on the subject of a new referendum on Brexit. Now Jeremy Corbyn must make a decision to commit to a second referendum. There are arguments of principle and tactics for making the promise clearer and more emphatic. The argument of principle is that a new referendum is the only democratic way to resolve the Brexit morass. Parliament and the nation are now divided three ways between leaving the EU with a deal leaving without a deal or not leaving at all.</description>
													<link>https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/editorials/jeremy-corbyn-brexit-referendum-european-elections-tig-change-uk-farage-party-a8868591.html</link>
													<pubDate>14th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Hard Brexit leader would be suicide top Tories warn</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The Times</author>
													<description>
													Senior Tories have launched a stop Boris campaign warning that handing the keys to No 10 to a hard Brexiteer such as Boris Johnson or Dominic Raab would be electoral suicide. Sir Patrick McLoughlin the former party chairman who is backing Jeremy Hunt to succeed Theresa May today launches a broadside at Brexiteer candidates warning that their ideological attachment to a nodeal Brexit is reckless. Writing in The Sunday Times he says Defining ourselves as the Brexit party pursuing the hardest form of Brexit with a parliament that will not deliver it is a recipe for paralysis in government and suicide with the electorate. We are and must remain the Conservative Party not the Vote Leave party.</description>
													<link>https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/hard-brexit-leader-would-be-suicide-top-tories-warn-59vq2nppg</link>
													<pubDate>14th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>New Brexiteer mutiny Ringleader Iain Duncan Smith says Tories could boycott EU elections</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>Daily Mail</author>
													<description>
													Former Tory leader Iain Duncan Smith says local Conservative associations could boycott the EU elections if the UK is still a part of the bloc next month. The Chingford and Woodford Green MP slammed the Conservative leadership for not following through on its promise to leave on March 29 calling it a disaster for party support. Mr Duncan Smith said the elections are impossible to justify. He ridiculed the notion of campaigning for the May 23 election while at the same time saying British MEPs wont exist in a few months. </description>
													<link>https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6920561/New-Brexiteer-mutiny-Ringleader-Iain-Duncan-Smith-says-Tories-boycott-EU-elections.html</link>
													<pubDate>14th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>As nationalists grip the Tories I now support Change UK</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													Both Labour and Conservative frontbenches have colluded in the same conspiracy to respect the result of the 2016 referendum that is to conceal the truth about its consequences because they rightly fear that their party duopoly will not survive a more honest engagement with voters. The European election could give UK voters the voice Westminster has denied them</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/apr/14/nationalists-grip-tories-i-now-support-change-uk-brexit-european-elections</link>
													<pubDate>14th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Judge orders Ukip to reveal Brexit referendum data use</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													Ukip has been ordered to fully reveal details of how it used nearly 300000 of political data services in the runup to the Brexit vote and the 2015 general election after the party lost a twoyear legal battle to block disclosure. An appeals tribunal found the political party led at the time by Nigel Farage failed to properly answer the information commissioners questions. It is now legally obliged to provide detailed answers to questions about how it spent political donations and used polling companies and data. The ruling is the latest watchdog finding to cast a shadow over the 2016 EU referendum and to raise concerns about the use of political and social media data.</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/apr/14/judge-orders-ukip-reveal-brexit-referendum-data-use</link>
													<pubDate>14th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Chris Johns Fantasy nodeal Brexit has cost UK equivalent of 22 hospitals</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The Irish Times</author>
													<description>
													Brexit planning has so far cost the UK government 4 billion. Much is made of this figure because it represents hard cash actually spent. These are direct costs. But its the invisible damage that is much bigger  and gets far less attention. Goldman Sachs for example estimates that Brexit has resulted in 600 million of lost GDP per week since the referendum. My own calculations suggest that the implied loss of 85 billion to the economy maps to 28 billion of tax revenue gone missing. So far. That 4 billion in Brexit planning spending makes the headlines but the loss of 28 billion in taxes obviously hurts a lot more. Leading Brexiteer Daniel Hannan once claimed that seven stateoftheart hospitals could be built for 10 billion. On that kind of arithmetic I reckon that the UK has 22 hospitals gone missing as a result of Brexit.</description>
													<link>https://www.irishtimes.com/business/economy/chris-johns-fantasy-no-deal-brexit-has-cost-uk-equivalent-of-22-hospitals-1.3860125</link>
													<pubDate>14th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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																	<title>Boris Johnson could lose his seat due to a surge in younger voters</title>
																		<section>Political Setbacks</section>
																		<author>The Sun</author>
																		<description>
													</description>
																		<link>https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/8858665/boris-johnson-seat-threat-2022-election-odds/</link>
																		<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Tory Boris Johnson could lose his seat due to influx of young voters</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>Metro.co.uk</author>
													<description>
													Boris Johnson could be at risk of losing his seat due to a surge in younger voters research has revealed. The former foreign secretarys seat in Uxbridge and South Ruislip has been listed as vulnerable in the 2022 election by Onward think tank. Analysis shows the ratio of younger residents aged 20 to 39 to older votes aged 60 and over is currently above 1.1  meaning the Tory candidate would likely lose.</description>
													<link>https://metro.co.uk/2019/04/14/boris-johnson-lose-seat-due-influx-young-voters-9199047/</link>
													<pubDate>14th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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																	<title>Beware those who like Ukips leader excuse lies and rape threats as satire</title>
																		<section>Political Setbacks</section>
																		<author>The Guardian</author>
																		<description>
													</description>
																		<link>https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/apr/14/beware-ukip-leader-excuse-rape-threats-satire</link>
																		<pubDate>14th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>UKIP leader Gerard Batten defends European Parliament candidates rape tweet satire</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>Sky News</author>
													<description>
													The leader of UKIP has defended an election candidate who said they wouldnt even rape Labour MP Jess Phillips. Gerard Batten called the comment satire and praised Carl Benjamin who was last week picked as an MEP candidate for the South West region. Mr Benjamin had previously written in a tweet to Ms Philips I wouldnt even rape you. Mr Batten defended the post telling the BBCs Andrew Marr Show I think this was satire.</description>
													<link>https://news.sky.com/story/ukip-leader-gerard-batten-defends-european-parliament-candidates-rape-tweet-satire-11693819</link>
													<pubDate>14th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>UK fears Brexit could hurt global hunt for new BoE governor</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>Reuters</author>
													<description>
													British finance minister Philip Hammond has fired the starting gun for the race to succeed Bank of England Governor Mark Carney but concerns about Brexit may keep some potential contestants on the sidelines.  the next BoE governor will have to reckon with a sharply divided political backdrop on top of the obvious challenges that Brexit poses as regards shortterm growth and longerterm regulatory relations with the EU. There may be some candidates who might be deterred from an application because of the political debate around Brexit which inevitably the governor of the Bank of England cant avoid being part of Hammond said in Washington. Carney has been criticised by members of hardline proBrexit faction of the Conservative Party. Jacob ReesMogg last year labelled Carney a wailing banshee and a failed secondtier politician who gave unfairly negative forecasts of the economic impact of Brexit. Boris Johnson when foreign secretary was dismissive of BoE predictions of Brexit damage.</description>
													<link>https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-britain-eu-boe-analysis/uk-fears-brexit-could-hurt-global-hunt-for-new-boe-governor-idUKKCN1RQ0NH?feedType=RSS&amp;ampfeedName=topNews</link>
													<pubDate>14th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit cannot define us says PM Mays deputy as ratings dip</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>Reuters UK</author>
													<description>
													Britains ruling Conservative Party cannot let itself be defined solely by Brexit Prime Minister Theresa Mays de facto deputy said on Sunday as polling showed failure to leave the European Union on schedule has badly damaged its support. Mays authority has been shattered by her threetime failure to get an exit deal approved by parliament and a pledge to quit once Brexit is delivered driving speculation about her successor and a possible national election. The onceprized stability of British politics has disappeared threatening to break apart both the Conservatives and their main opponents Labour and leaving the worlds fifthlargest economy facing an uncertain future. Without any consensus in parliament reflective of a deeply divided population all outcomes remain possible in the coming weeks and months leaving the EU with a deal a disorderly exit without a deal or another vote on whether to leave at all.</description>
													<link>https://in.reuters.com/article/uk-britain-eu/brexit-cannot-define-us-says-uk-pms-deputy-as-ratings-dip-idINKCN1RQ0EA</link>
													<pubDate>14th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit talks will stall unless May shifts on customs union</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													Talks between Labour and the government are unlikely to advance much further in the coming week unless Theresa May moves on her red lines over a future customs union sources close to the talks have suggested. David Lidington who is leading the governments talks with Labour said a compromise would have to be reached but played down suggestions that a government shift was imminent and added that Labour would also have to move. Labour has suggested the ball is in the governments court and while the opposition will engage on other topics including workers rights and security the key question on customs arrangements remains unresolved. She needs to take a political decision to move off her red lines  or not one source said.</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/apr/14/brexit-talks-will-stall-unless-may-shifts-on-customs-union</link>
													<pubDate>14th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Tories hit by new defections and slump in opinion polls as party divide widens</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													The bitter fallout from Brexit is threatening to break the Tory party apart as a Europhile former cabinet minister Stephen Dorrell on Sunday announces he is defecting to the independent MPs group Change UK and a new opinion poll shows Conservative support plummeting to a fiveyear low as antiEU parties surge. Writing in Sundays Observer Dorrell who was health secretary under John Major says he can no longer continue in a party that has fallen progressively under the influence of an English nationalist outlook and turned its back on the traditions of many of its greatest former leaders. Arguing that neither the Conservatives nor Labour now represent mainstream opinion in the UK Dorrell says that the current twoparty system no longer serves the interests of the electorate. He writes I shall continue to describe myself as I always have as a liberal Conservative but I shall do so in future as a supporter of Change UK  The Independent Group which I believe has become the natural home of those who regard themselves as I do as the heirs of Disraeli Churchill Macmillan and Heath.</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2019/apr/14/stephen-dorrell-defection-change-uk-tory-poll-five-year-low</link>
													<pubDate>14th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit news Conservatives face European elections drubbing as support slumps to lowest point in six years</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The Independent</author>
													<description>
													The Conservatives are facing a humiliating defeat at the European elections next month after support for the party slumped to its lowest level since 2013 according to a new poll. The survey shows the Tories on just 28 per cent when it comes to general election voting intention  a fourpoint fall which leaves them trailing Labour on 32. When voters were asked which party they will vote for at the European elections Theresa Mays party languished on 16 per cent eight points behind Labour on 24</description>
													<link>https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/brexit-latest-conservatives-poll-low-european-elections-labour-lead-latest-a8868206.html</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit news latest Jeremy Corbyn blasts Theresa May over scandalous failure to seek earlier talks</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>Evening Standard</author>
													<description>
													Jeremy Corbyn has said it was scandalous that Theresa May didnt seek earlier Brexit talks with Labour. It came as he insisted the Prime Minister must compromise on her red lines if a crossparty deal is to happen. And the Labour leader said Mrs May should not use the delay of Brexit until October 31 as a chance to put her Withdrawal Agreement to the Commons again. It has already been rejected three times.</description>
													<link>https://www.standard.co.uk/news/politics/jeremy-corbyn-blasts-theresa-may-over-scandalous-failure-to-seek-earlier-brexit-talks-as-labour-a4117356.html</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit Germanys Steinmeier hopes UK leaves before EU elections</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>Deutsche Welle</author>
													<description>
													The German president has warned that Britains exit from the European Union cannot become an endless horror story. Concerns are growing that proBrexit parties could disrupt next months EU parliamentary elections and that Brexit still rumbling on will help them</description>
													<link>https://www.dw.com/cda/en/brexit-germanys-steinmeier-hopes-uk-leaves-before-eu-elections/a-48315650</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Corbyn tells May to abandon Brexit red lines</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>Belfast Telegraph</author>
													<description>
													Jeremy Corbyn has insisted Theresa May must compromise on her Brexit red lines if crossparty talks on EU withdrawal are to succeed. The Labour leader said it is scandalous the Prime Minister did not seek dialogue with Labour on Brexit earlier.</description>
													<link>https://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/uk/corbyn-tells-may-to-abandon-brexit-red-lines-38011993.html</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Antiracism groups issue warning to new Brexit Party and urge against divisive politics</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>iNews</author>
													<description>
													Groups campaigning for an end to racism and discrimination have issued warnings about divisive politics amid the launch of the Brexit Party headed up by former Ukip leader Nigel Farage. Mr Farage spoke at an event launching the partys campaign for the May EU elections on Friday during which he introduced five new candidates including the sister of Brexiteer Jacob ReesMogg. He quit Ukip over its veer towards the far right and affiliation with antiMuslim campaigner Tommy Robinson saying that it had descended into yobbery. Mr Farage described the new party as being deeply intolerant of intolerance but it has already run into controversy after two senior figures were forced to step down from their roles due to racist social media posts.</description>
													<link>https://inews.co.uk/news/politics/brexit-party-nigel-farage-warning-anti-racism-campaign-group/</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>May must use Brexit delay to tear up hated Irish backstop and finally seal a deal DUP blasts</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The Sun</author>
													<description>
													Theresa May is today under fresh pressure to rip up her Brexit deal and scrap the hated Irish backstop. DUP boss Arlene Foster called on the PM to use the sixmonth delay to Brexit to start talks again and push the EU into compromising. She warned that if Brussels doesnt shift its position the EU will be responsible for triggering a No Deal scenario. Ms Fosters demand was echoed by Boris Johnson  and his father Stanley who is planning to stand as a Tory candidate in Euro elections.</description>
													<link>https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/brexit/8843925/may-must-use-brexit-delay-to-tear-up-hated-irish-backstop-and-finally-seal-a-deal-dup-blasts/</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>So now Brexit could fall on Halloween. How very  appropriate</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													The socalled Project Fear mounted during the EU referendum campaign is associated with remainers but the Brexiteers have their own version of it so they may welcome the fact that the new opportunity to jump off the cliff coincides with Halloween. Heres Jacob ReesMogg speaking at the London Palladium recently If we try to stay beyond the European elections there will be only one winner from that and that would be Tommy Robinson. And last year at the Tory conference Boris Johnson said The ultimate beneficiary of the Chequers deal will be the far right. It really is deeply irritating when a multimillionaire Old Etonian says Im going to get my mates from the working class to beat you up.</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/apr/12/brexit-halloween-rees-mogg-fear-far-right</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Were fed up of Brexit yet we cant get enough of it</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>RTE.ie</author>
													<description>
													Six more months. Heres a paradox we are all fed up to the back teeth of hearing about Brexit and yet we cannot get enough of it. Brexit related twistsandturns predictably dominate the airwaves rightly or wrongly monopolising the attention of our politicians and political commentators. And it has been relentless. But like a wart or a cold sore we just cant leave Brexit alone. We keep thinking about it going back to it examining it. We hate it and yet we are drawn to it.</description>
													<link>https://www.rte.ie/brainstorm/2019/0412/1042195-brexit-fed-up-of-it-cant-get-enough-of-it/</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>When it comes to Brexit politicians are only respecting the will of the white people</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The Independent</author>
													<description>
													Missing from almost all the coverage and debate are those voices of ethnic minorities. Its ironic given that we were one of the biggest dissenting voices against Brexit. In the 2016 referendum 73 percent of Black and 67 per cent of Asian voters opted to Remain. Given that the 7.5 million people from ethnic minorities represent a larger population than Scotland and Northern Ireland combined it is high time that these voices are no longer marginalised. Unfortunately as is usually the case it is the will of white English people that is being represented as that of the nation.</description>
													<link>https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/brexit-extension-theresa-may-brussels-eu-race-bame-peoples-vote-a8865346.html</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Real divide is wealth not Brexit says Jeremy Corbyn</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>BBC</author>
													<description>
													The real divide in society is between rich and poor and not Brexit Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has told party members in Llandudno. At Welsh Labour conference Mr Corbyn said his party is trying to end the Commons deadlock on the issue. He said he did not want to pit remain voters in one part of the country against leave voters in another. Meanwhile Welsh Labour leader Mark Drakeford said Brexit should not be used to shortchange Wales. He also announced 2.3m to offer sanitary products to all learners in schools and colleges.</description>
													<link>https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-wales-politics-47916058</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Former Tory leader outlines plan to save Brexit that is sure to infuriate Brussels</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>Express.co.uk</author>
													<description>
													Lord Howard claimed the House of Commons would support Prime Ministers deal on the condition she renegotiates the Northern Ireland backstop. He wrote the Daily Telegraph Achieving this would not just win the support of Parliament but also create a coherent position around which a Conservative Party that appears dangerously disunited could begin to coalesce. The problems with the backstop arise solely out of the EUs refusal to countenance any change to the wording of the Withdrawal Agreement</description>
													<link>https://www.express.co.uk/news/politics/1113692/brexit-news-latest-irish-backstop-leave-eu-no-deal-michael-howard-theresa-may</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>If Tory MPs wish to change the 1922 committee no confidence vote rules there is nothing standing in their way</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The Telegraph</author>
													<description>
													Two former chairs of the influential Conservative Party 1922 Committee give their opinions that If Tory MPs wish to change the 1922 committee no confidence vote rules there is nothing standing in their way</description>
													<link>https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2019/04/13/tory-mps-wish-change-1922-committee-no-confidence-vote-rules/</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Tory Brexiteer Boris Johnson will refuse to campaign in European elections</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>Politics Home</author>
													<description>
													A source close to Mr Johnson told The Times Boris wont campaign in European elections. He believes the prospect of the UK fielding candidates is utterly preposterous. The intervention comes after Chancellor Philip Hammond admitted that taking part in the fresh elections to the European Parliament where Britain holds 73 of 751 seats would be pointless.</description>
													<link>https://www.politicshome.com/news/uk/foreign-affairs/brexit/news/103229/tory-brexiteer-boris-johnson-will-refuse-campaign</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Death threats leave TIG MP Sarah Wollaston too afraid to advertise public meetings</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The Independent</author>
													<description>
													Whats angered me is that I have had to change the way I operate as an MP. I can no longer advertise on social media my public meetings for example. I used to hold surgeries in public places and tell people Id be there I cant do that any more. And so I think there is something leading to a diminution of our very open access.  Its a shame and I think its a loss.  She said comments made by members of the Brexitbacking European Research Group about Theresa May had encouraged a culture of hostility from rightwing extremists. I think MPs routinely come under the most extreme sort of threats from the far right Ms Wollaston said. What we have seen is a normalisation of threats of violence that was never there when I first went into politics.</description>
													<link>https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/sarah-wollaston-brexit-erg-abuse-politicians-a8856961.html</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Leadership rivals target exsoldiers with dirty tricks</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>Daily Mail</author>
													<description>
													Tory Whips were at the centre of a growing dirty tricks storm last night after it emerged that a second former Army officer tipped for party leadership is having his past mysteriously probed. On Thursday war hero turned Plymouth MP Johnny Mercer took to social media to accuse an anonymous Tory enforcer of attempting to dig up dirt about his military career. The accused is understood to be Deputy Chief Whip Chris Pincher. Now The Mail on Sunday has learnt that similar enquiries have been made to former Army colleagues of Tory MP Tom Tugendhat  who served in the Intelligence Corps  who last week ruled out a tilt at No 10.</description>
													<link>https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6919497/Leadership-rivals-target-ex-soldiers-dirty-tricks.html</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Theresa May cancels Easter break for Brexit negotiators to fight Nigel Farage</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>Daily Mirror</author>
													<description>
													A Downing Street source said These talks have been constructive and serious and both sides want to see further progress over the Easter recess. If we can keep up the pace of negotiations we can get a deal over the line and avoid having European elections. The negotiating teams have split into working groups. 
Greg Clark and Rebecca LongBailey will look at services and consumer and workers rights. Michael Gove and Sue Hayman will work on environmental protection. And Steve Barclay and Keir Starmer will discuss security. But Labour sources insist little progress can be made without movement from the PM. 
One said We need her to make serious commitment to moving her red lines. Until then its impossible to see these talks going anywhere.</description>
													<link>https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/politics/theresa-cancels-easter-break-brexit-14309023</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit battles are about to get much bloodier</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>CNN</author>
													<description>
													This time Farage will be able to use the single most divisive issue in the country to his advantage. Even if his party isnt as successful as he hopes its likely that a large chunk of the MEPs the UK sends will be euroskeptic. This should worry the EU. As a full member state the UK will have voting rights and be able to frustrate the EUs plans as long as it remains inside the bloc. Jacob ReesMogg a Conservative MP and leader of the proBrexit European Research Group says this belligerent behavior is entirely justifiable and necessary. The EU has not been sincerely cooperative during the Brexit process so I dont think we owe a duty of cooperation to the EU in return ReesMogg said.</description>
													<link>https://edition.cnn.com/2019/04/13/uk/brexit-luke-mcgee-analysis-intl-gbr/index.html</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Leave voters have lost faith in the Tories ability to deliver Brexit</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The Telegraph</author>
													<description>
													The Conservatives failure so far to secure Britains withdrawal from the European Union is now at risk of costing them dearly. When the Prime Minister first unveiled her deal in midNovember the party was largely still holding its own.  After 5 months of nonstop Brexit debate is poll ratings are falling and the new Brexit Party ratings are rising along with the Remain parties ratings</description>
													<link>https://www.telegraph.co.uk/politics/2019/04/13/leave-voters-have-lost-faith-tories-ability-deliver-brexit/</link>
													<pubDate>13th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Halloween Brexit is a fitting outcome for the zombie prime minister</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													The EU summit became absurdist performance art as all agreed on something they did not want</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2019/apr/12/halloween-brexit-fitting-outcome-for-zombie-prime-minister</link>
													<pubDate>12th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit Boris Johnson wrong on nodeal polling claim</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>BBC</author>
													<description>
													Boris Johnson was wrong to claim there was polling evidence that a nodeal Brexit was the publics preferred option the press regulator has ruled. Ipso ordered the Daily Telegraph to print a correction after finding the MPs column was inaccurate.
The claim was made in a piece headlined The British people wont be scared into backing a woeful Brexit deal nobody voted for in January. The Telegraph had argued it was clearly comically polemical</description>
													<link>https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-47913555</link>
													<pubDate>12th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Row erupts as civil servants ordered to halt 4bn nodeal Brexit planning with immediate effect</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>Politics Home</author>
													<description>
													The decision to begin winding down the emergency preparations came after European leaders agreed to delay the UKs exit until 31 October. Since triggering Article 50 two years ago some 16000 civil servants have been moved to departments most likely to be impacted if the UK left the EU without a deal. Labour MP Hilary Benn who chairs the crossparty Commons Brexit Select Committee said the estimated 1.5bn cost of halting the preparations was a result of Mrs Mays refusal to rule out a nodeal Brexit sooner. He said It was important to plan for all contigencies but this is the huge cost of the Prime Minister repeatedly saying My deal or no deal when she knew that leaving without a deal was not in the national interest. This is one example of how Brexit is proving to be very costly for our country. </description>
													<link>https://www.politicshome.com/news/uk/government-and-public-sector/news/103211/row-erupts-civil-servants-ordered-halt-%C2%A34bn-no-deal</link>
													<pubDate>12th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Staying in a customs union after Brexit wont resolve the Irish border issue</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The Guardian</author>
													<description>
													The EU is unlikely to accept a request from the UK that it should have a say over the EUs trade agreements. Article 207 of the Lisbon treaty makes clear that the common commercial policy is exclusive to the EUs direction. Turkey which is in a partial customs union with the EU has to follow EU trade agreements with third countries but has no say on them. The reality is that in a customs union all the power would rest with the EU with the UK as a follower.</description>
													<link>https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/apr/12/brexit-customs-union-labour-irish-border</link>
													<pubDate>12th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit Philip Hammond defends spending billons on nodeal preparations</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>Sky News</author>
													<description>
													The chancellor has defended spending billions of pounds preparing for a nodeal Brexit. Philip Hammond made his case after Sky News revealed the government was mothballing the team of civil servants responsible for nodeal planning. Over the past two years the government had moved thousands of civil servants away from their normal jobs to prepare for the possibility that the UK would leave the European Union without a deal. Mr Hammond told Sky News It would have been irresponsible not to prepare for no deal so long as it was a real possible outcome.
Making preparations for events that we hope will not happen is an everyday part of government.</description>
													<link>https://news.sky.com/story/brexit-philip-hammond-defends-spending-billons-on-no-deal-preparations-11691557</link>
													<pubDate>12th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>The Establishment Coup Against Brexit</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>The Wall Street Journal</author>
													<description>
													Something profoundly unpleasant has happened in Britain over the past three years. It has come to a boiling point these past few weeks and will probably stay at this heat for a good many more. It can be summed up as a barely concealed dislike of democracy on the part of a considerable subsection of the elite those who lost the referendum.</description>
													<link>https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-establishment-coup-against-brexit-11555107537</link>
													<pubDate>12th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Faisal Islam bids farewell to Sky News after five years as political editor</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>Press Gazette</author>
													<description>
													I fear politics has not learnt the lessons it needs to from the latter form of political terrorism. Unnecessarily aggressive personalised attacks on our politicians demean and endanger the entire process. Islam added that he finds the weaponisation of betrayal politics deeply troubling adding There are senior politicians who should stop playing with fire.</description>
													<link>https://www.pressgazette.co.uk/faisal-islam-bids-farewell-to-sky-news-after-five-years-as-political-editor-beth-rigby/</link>
													<pubDate>12th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Farage tells BBC host NO SIX TIMES during FIERY exchange over Brexit Party funding</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>Expres.co.uk</author>
													<description>
													Nigel Farage got into a fiery debate with BBC host Elizabeth Glinka after she repeatedly demanded to know whether businessman and political donor Aaron Banks would be funding the former Ukip leaders new Brexit Party.</description>
													<link>https://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/1113436/Brexit-news-Nigel-Farage-BBC-Politics-UK-EU-Theresa-May-no-deal-vote-latest</link>
													<pubDate>12th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Brexit DUP threaten to PULL backing of Mays government amid chat with Boris</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>Daily Mirror</author>
													<description>
													Theresa Mays DUP allies have threatened to pull support for her government in a furious clash over Brexit. The partys 10 MPs have backed the PM since 2017 after being handed 1bn for Northern Ireland in a twoyear deal. Asked if the DUP still had confidence in Mrs May after the extension the DUP leader said The confidence and supply agreement that we signed was with the Conservative Party and whoever the leader of the party is we will work with. We believe in national stability. We want to see Brexit delivered.</description>
													<link>https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/politics/brexit-dup-threaten-pull-backing-14289099</link>
													<pubDate>12th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Five key things we learnt from Nigel Farages Brexit launch party</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>Coventry Telegraph</author>
													<description>
													Nigel Farage arrived in Coventry to launch the Brexit Party today  promising it would not ignore democracy. He promised a revolution in British politics and unveiled some of the big names who had signed up to the party  including sister of leading Conservative Brexiteer MP Jacob ReesMogg Annunziata ReesMogg. 
Speaking at the B.G Penny factory in the city after the government delayed Brexit for a second time he said Coventry was chosen for the launch because it was the heart of England.</description>
													<link>https://www.coventrytelegraph.net/news/coventry-news/nigel-farage-brexit-party-highlights-16121202</link>
													<pubDate>12th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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													<title>Is Brexit the will of the people The answer is not quite that simple</title>
													<section>Political Setbacks</section>
													<author>LSE Blogs</author>
													<description>
													...there are several complicating factors. First of all the majority was narrow. There were 17.4 million votes for Leave 16.1 million votes for Remain and 12.9 million abstentions. A further 18 million people living in the UK were not on the electoral register including all young people below the age of 18 and many longterm residents who are not citizens though they contribute to British society and have a stake in it. So although 17.4 million is a large number it is only a relative majority not an absolute one.</description>
													<link>https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/brexit/2019/04/11/is-brexit-the-will-of-the-people-the-answer-is-not-quite-that-simple/</link>
													<pubDate>11th Apr 2019</pubDate>
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