Brexit
The Prime Minister should not flout international law to save her deal
A beefed-up role for Parliament's role in the Irish backstop could render the UK in breach of international law.
Brexit billions sound big, but won’t solve ‘no deal’
The decision to agree this latest cash injection is being reported as part of a wider ramping up of preparations for a ‘no deal’ Brexit.
Government should admit that the UK will not be ready for no deal
It’s time for the Government to be honest about no deal.
Director’s Annual Lecture 2019
The Institute for Government hosted the third annual lecture by its Director, Bronwen Maddox.
Domestic policy delays are a Brexit issue
The Prime Minister’s choice to focus her political energy on Brexit is understandable, but ultimately a false economy.
How the Prime Minister could break the stalemate on Brexit
Time is short and the Government needs to get over the meaningful vote hurdle to unlock possible ways forward.
Five ways MPs could force the Government’s hand on Brexit
If MPs wanted to prevent a no deal exit, or direct what the Government does next, there are five ways they could make their views known.
Indicative votes on Brexit
Indicative votes are votes by MPs on a series of non-binding resolutions. We explain why the government allowed MPs indicative votes on Brexit.
New immigration plan must ditch empty rhetoric and scrap pointless targets
A new immigration strategy is a chance for the Home Office to be honest.
For the first time, a second Brexit referendum is a serious possibility
A second referendum is not the simple solution it appears.