SUCCESS via a negotiated NO DEAL Brexit

The 2016 EU Referendum asked voters whether they wanted to remain in the EU or leave it. On the Referendum ballot paper there was no mention of any conditional deal with the EU as to the manner of leaving – we simply voted for Britain to cease being a member of the European Union and revert to pre-1973 independence.  Read Story

Boris Johnson speech to Conservative Party Conference

Why was it 25 years since any of my predecessors had been to Argentina or Chile? It was because our entire global strategy has been focused on the EU. And while that may have been sensible in the 1970s, when we first joined the common market, it makes less sense in the globalised economy of today, when 95 per cent of the world’s growth is going to be outside the EU. Read Story

David Davis Resigns from the Cabinet sparking a Brexit rebellion within the Tory Party

Mr Davis quit the government and told the PM that her policies could leave the UK in a ‘weak and inescapable’ negotiating position, two days after the cabinet had finally agreed a plan for Britain’s departure from the European Union. Read Story

Is Nigel Farage Under The Influence Of Brussels?

Nigel Farage is now considering a ‘SECOND REFERENDUM’ following his recent meeting, this week, with Michael Barnier the EU’s chief negotiator for Brexit[1]. Arron Banks, the Brexit Leave Campaign Chief, has also come out in support of a second referendum. Read Story

Giving Up 1000 Years of Struggle to be Ruled by Foreigners

“By the year 2000”, he went on – in words that history has shown were a true prophecy – the immigrant population “must be in the region of five to seven million, approximately one-tenth of the whole population, and approaching that of Greater London… Whole areas, towns and parts of towns across England will be occupied by sections of the immigrant and immigrant-descended population.” Read Story