Free from fear or favour
Tracking and cookies. WHY?
Reform UK MP Richard Tice chats to Steve Bray – the ‘Stop Brexit Man’ who leads a dedicated pro-EU protest near Parliament – in January 2025 Photo: Imageplotter/Alamy

Ten Long Years of Bitterness

A decade after the EU Referendum, British politics remains fundamentally
poisoned by a project that produced no benefits, writes Chris Grey

The explosion of chatter generated by the 10th anniversary of what we now call the ‘Brexit referendum’ has been revealing. For its most passionate advocates, Brexit was to be no less than a national liberation and the beginning of a national renaissance. Had it been, this would be a time of national celebration. But that is not the case at all.

Instead, the commentary around the referendum’s 10th anniversary this month reveals a nation bitterly divided about the wisdom of the decision, with even the minority who still support it very often depicting it as having been ‘betrayed’.

Indeed, ever since the referendum result, it has been a grim irony that those on the winning side are just as bitter as those who lost. It is this roiling bitterness that is the most enduring legacy of the 2016 vote.

Half Man: ‘We’re Beginning to Get a Better, Much More Nuanced Understanding… Vulnerability is a Part of Masculinity Now’

Hardeep Matharu speaks to Duncan Craig, founder of We Are Survivors – a charity supporting survivors of male sexual abuse – about why the ‘toxic masculinity’ narrative has been problematic, and the eye-opening exploration of complex male relationships in Richard Gadd’s new six-part series Half Man
Hardeep Matharu

How to Stop Billionaires Buying British Politics

We must act now to prevent a complete oligarchical takeover of our democracy, writes Oliver Bullough
Oliver Bullough