Brexit: Media updates

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  • 01/01/2021
    Mobile roaming: What will happen to charges after Brexit?

    The government is advising travellers heading for European Union countries to check their mobile phone provider’s roaming charges. That’s because the UK’s trade deal with the EU does not rule out additional costs for UK customers using their mobile phones in EU countries. The biggest UK operators have said they do not plan to reintroduce Read more >

  • 26/12/2020
    Erasmus: NI students with British passports can access funding

    Students at NI universities can participate in the scheme under an arrangement with the Irish government, at a cost of about €2.1 (£1.9m) a year. Erasmus is an EU programme that helps students study in other countries. Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced that the UK will not continue to participate in it and will be Read more >

  • 05/02/2020
    Brexit: Northern Ireland consumers ‘could face reduced choice’

    Stormont officials working on Brexit have said there is real concern consumers in Northern Ireland will face reduced choice and higher prices when the withdrawal deal is implemented. Some goods entering NI from GB will face new checks and controls. “There are significant consequences of not landing this properly,” senior official Paul Grocott told the Read more >

  • 11/10/2019
    EU nationals lacking settled status could be deported

    Brandon Lewis says people who do not apply before 2021 may be removed from UK. The security minister, Brandon Lewis, has threatened EU citizens with deportation from the UK if they do not apply for settled status after Brexit. Home Office figures show a million of the estimated 3 million EU citizens in the UK Read more >

  • 19/03/2019
    Press statement by Michel Barnier following the General Affairs Council (Article 50)

    Ladies and gentlemen, Last week, the House of Commons voted against the Withdrawal Agreement and against a “no-deal” scenario. But voting against “no deal” does not prevent it from happening. Everyone should now finalise all preparations for a “no deal” scenario. On the EU side, we are prepared. The European Parliament and the Council have Read more >

  • 19/03/2019
    Minister for European Affairs Helen McEntee attends GAC in Brussels

    The Minister of State for European Affairs, Helen McEntee T.D., is today in Brussels for a meeting of the General Affairs Council and an Article 50 General Affairs Council with the Tánaiste Simon Coveney. Speaking ahead of the meeting, the Minister said: “I am looking forward to engaging with my European colleagues on the Union’s Read more >

  • 19/03/2019
    Statement following the meeting between An Taoiseach and President Tusk

    An Taoiseach, Leo Varadkar met with the President of the European Council, Donald Tusk at Government Buildings in Dublin today to discuss the state of play and latest developments with Brexit. President Tusk expressed the strong and ongoing solidarity with Ireland of the European Council and European leaders. They agreed that we must now see Read more >

  • 18/03/2019
    Creed highlights threats of no-deal Brexit in Brussels meetings

    Speaking in Brussels this evening, Michael Creed TD, Minister for Agriculture, Food and the Marine, said: “Today’s Council of Agriculture Ministers meeting was an important opportunity to highlight to the Council, the Commission and to my fellow Ministers, the impacts of a no-Deal Brexit on the agri-food sector in Ireland and with potential knock-on effects Read more >

  • 13/03/2019
    Michel Barnier: Brexit extension ‘for what?’

    STRASBOURG — The Brexit negotiation is “over” and the U.K. must now tell the EU what relationship it wants before asking for an extension to Article 50, the bloc’s negotiator Michel Barnier told MEPs today.Barnier was responding to the second thumping rejection of the Brexit deal — with added legal assurances for the U.K. on Read more >

  • 13/03/2019
    MEPs vote to limit negative impact of no-deal Brexit on citizens

    To ensure the least possible disruption, MEPs on Wednesday vote on travel, transport, Erasmus, social security and fisheries measures. Source: European Parliament.

  • 12/03/2019
    Business leaders react with dismay to Brexit ‘circus’

    Business groups have reacted with dismay to parliament’s second rejection of Theresa May’s Brexit deal, saying they were exasperated by the lack of clarity over the UK’s trading arrangements with the European Union after 29 March. The pound briefly recovered some of its losses during the day in the minutes after the vote on Tuesday, Read more >

  • 11/03/2019
    Unions attack May’s Brexit pledge on workers’ rights

    Law expert says PM cannot bind future parliaments to match EU standards. Labour MPs are being a sent a legal opinion warning that government promises to guarantee workers’ rights after Brexit do not offer any credible assurances. The critical legal assessment of Theresa May’s plan to “embed the strongest possible protections” of employment entitlements has Read more >

  • 05/03/2019
    Government Advances No Deal Brexit Contingency Planning and Preparations

    The Government today received a further update on whole-of-Government contingency preparations for a no deal Brexit scenario. The Tánaiste briefed on intensive work that has taken place across Departments and Agencies to take further steps to implement the Contingency Action Plan published in December. While ratification of the Withdrawal Agreement remains the Government’s preferred outcome, Read more >

  • 19/02/2019
    Border concerns over return of mobile roaming charges post Brexit

    The prospect of having to pay mobile phone roaming charges post Brexit is becoming a concern for people living in border counties like Donegal. Since June 2017 when the European Union scrapped additional charges for roaming on smartphones in other EU countries people in border counties, where signals roam in and out regularly, have not Read more >

  • 18/02/2019
    Brexit preparedness: Commission intensifies “NO-DEAL” CUSTOMS PREPAREDNESS outreach to EU businesses

    The European Commission has today stepped up its “no-deal” outreach to EU businesses in the area of customs and indirect taxation such as VAT, given the risk that the United Kingdom may leave the EU on 30 March this year without a deal (a “no-deal” scenario). The outreach campaign launched today is part of the Read more >

  • 09/02/2019
    UK, Norway and Iceland reach post-Brexit citizens’ rights deal

    The United Kingdom reached an agreement with Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway on citizens’ rights if Britain were to leave the EU on March 29 without a Brexit deal. Britain and the three EU outsiders (who are members of the European Economic Area but not the EU) agreed last year to apply the principles of a Read more >

  • 07/02/2019
    NO QUICK FIX FOR CITIZEN RIGHTS under no-deal Brexit

    EU and UK nationals living abroad could face limbo after withdrawal agreement rejected Nearly 5 million British and EU citizens could be stuck in limbo after a no-deal Brexit, a senior EU official has warned, who said it could take several years “to pick up the pieces” of the UK crashing out of the bloc. Read more >

  • 07/02/2019
    Green cards mandatory for Irish drivers travelling to NI in no deal Brexit

    Irish Examiner The Transport Minister cannot say if drivers who are stopped without a green card after Brexit will be prosecuted or have their vehicles seized. Appearing before the Transport Committee, Shane Ross confirmed that Irish drivers who travel across the border into Northern Ireland would have to carry a green card to prove they Read more >

  • 22/01/2019
    Irish border trade at all-time high

    Belfast Telegraph – Cross-border trade in goods has been growing at an average rate of 4% a year over the past 20 years. The level of goods traded across the Irish border is at an all-time high, officials said. It stands at £6.1 billion for 2017, an all-island organisation established after the Good Friday Agreement Read more >

  • 17/01/2019
    Five things Irish motorists need to know about the ‘Green Card’ in event of a No-Deal Brexit

    Irish Independent – Irish motorists wanting to drive in the UK, including Northern Ireland, will need to arrange so-called ‘Green Cards’ in the event of a no-deal Brexit, insurers have warned. What is a Green Card? A Green Card is an internationally recognised insurance document which provides proof of the minimum compulsory motor insurance cover Read more >

  • 16/01/2019
    Brexit Borderlands: The Irish Times maps Ireland’s border crossings

    The Irish Times – The Border between the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland has been the issue that has bedevilled the Brexit negotiations, one that has overshadowed the departure of the United Kingdom from the European Union. Against this background, and in light of the misunderstandings that surround the issue of the Irish Border, The Irish Times has brought together a volume of information Read more >

  • 15/01/2019
    Rights of Irish in Britain and British in Ireland protected from no-deal Brexit

    The Irish Times New UK-Ireland arrangement to protect Common Travel Area ‘ready to go’ – Tánaiste Irish citizens living in Britain and British citizens living in Ireland will not have to take any action to protect their existing rights in the event of a no-deal Brexit. Tánaiste Simon Coveney said a new bilateral arrangement between the UK and Ireland to Read more >

  • 14/01/2019
    What happens to the Irish border without a deal on Brexit?

    Sky News – It was barely mentioned during the referendum campaign, but the border on the island of Ireland has become the defining issue. The British and Irish governments have both stated that they are not preparing for a hard border between Northern Ireland and the Republic – so who is? “No one,” according to Read more >

  • 14/01/2019
    Brexit: The complex new boundaries between different groups of citizens in Northern Ireland

    thedetail – Deputy director of the Committee on the Administration of Justice (CAJ) Daniel Holder explains citizens’ rights post Brexit. Discussion on Brexit and Northern Ireland has focused extensively on the potential hardening of the land border, or a border in the Irish Sea. However, beyond that are numerous questions as to the impact of Read more >

  • 10/01/2019
    Brexit and the Irish border explained: why the headache is not going away any time soon

    The Telegraph – The “Irish question” has come to the forefront of the Brexit negotiations, even though the formal discussion about the shape of Britain’s future relationship with the European Union has not yet even begun. It is still not clear which type of Brexit the UK will pursue – the hard version in which the Read more >

  • 09/01/2019
    Stormont veto for Irish backstop ‘wouldn’t be acceptable’

    Independent.ie – Taoiseach Leo Varadkar has said it would not be acceptable for the Northern Ireland Assembly to have a veto over the so-called backstop to avoid a hard Border. The British government published proposals which would see Stormont given the power to veto new EU rules if the backstop came into effect post-Brexit. It Read more >

  • 29/12/2018
    Brexit: How the Irish border took centre stage in 2018

    BBC News – In 2018, the Irish border assumed a greater role in British politics than at probably any time since it was created. The debate has centred on what has become known as the backstop. It set off a political row about sovereignty, Northern Ireland’s place in the United Kingdom and the ultimate outcome Read more >

  • 20/12/2018
    UK confirms EU migrant clampdown post-Brexit

    Euractiv – The UK government confirmed on Wednesday (19 December) that most EU workers will no longer enjoy the automatic right to live and work in the UK, as it laid down its plans to reform immigration policy after the country leaves the EU. Home Secretary Sajid Javid said that the government’s immigration White Paper, which Read more >

  • 12/12/2018
    Brexit: Border businesses have already closed, committee told

    Irish Times – Businesses along the Border have already closed as a result of Brexit, an Oireachtas committee has heard. Pamela Arthurs, chief executive of the East Border Region, a local authority led cross-Border network, said in particular small rural businesses are being affected. “Businesses, particularly on this side of the Border, so many have closed – Read more >

  • 06/12/2018
    What will Brexit mean for 30,000 cross-border workers?

    RTE – Analysis: expect the UK’s departure from the EU to bring many consequences for the social security entitlements and rights of cross-border workers Since June 2016, Brexit has saturated the news. The backstop, the withdrawal agreement, Article 50, the transitional period: these phrases have become part of our daily lives, like a winter cold in December. And, like a winter cold, Read more >

  • 25/11/2018
    Brexit deal explained: backstops, trade and citizens’ rights

    The Guardian – The three main issues dealt with in the withdrawal agreement are citizens rights, the £39bn divorce deal and the problem of avoiding a border on the island of Ireland after Brexit. Citizens’ rights The deal safeguards the rights for more than 3 million EU citizens in the UK, and over 1 million Read more >

  • 24/10/2018
    Brexit backstop EXPLAINED: Why the Northern Ireland border is crucial

    The Express – BREXIT talks stalled once more at the EU summit last week, and despite the Prime Minister’s claim that a deal is 95 percent ready, the evidence is lacking. So why is the Irish border so crucial? Theresa May told MPs that while a deal was on its way, the Irish border was Read more >

  • 17/10/2018
    What if Brexit brings the violence back?

    The Irish Times – Mary Casey remembers how her father Jack gave pocket money to the children to buy sweets when he came home in his lorry to Inniskeen, Co Monaghan. “Daddy Cann,” they called him. Johnny McCann, as he was known to his fellow drivers, brought home tubes of Rolo chocolates for Mary and left them Read more >

  • 01/10/2018
    Irish consumer confidence falls sharply amid Brexit fears and increase in cost of bills

    Journal.ie – IRISH CONSUMER SENTIMENT fell sharply in September, according to a report released today. The KBC Bank/ESRI consumer sentiment index fell to 96.4 in September, its lowest level since December 2016. The six-point drop from August’s reading of 102.4 was also the largest monthly decline in four years. The report attributes the decline in Read more >

  • 26/09/2018
    Theresa May must agree a border solution or we are facing into a ‘no deal’ Brexit disaster

    Belfast Telegraph – After enduring Storm Ali and with all its disruption, destruction and death, we should now be preparing for Storm Brexit. While this will be an entirely man-made political storm, it has the potential to be massively destructive and rage for a very long time. Despite Theresa May’s unrealistic but earnest hopes, Salzburg, the city Read more >

  • 22/09/2018
    Patients on waiting lists face losing access to healthcare scheme in North

    Irish Independent – Patients in the Republic who are languishing on hospital waiting lists will lose out after Brexit as a vital cross-border treatment scheme becomes more difficult to access. The scheme allows eligible patients in any EU country to avail of treatment outside the jurisdiction. They pay upfront, but get the costs reimbursed by Read more >

  • 20/09/2018
    ‘It’s a bit scary’ – in the buildup to Brexit, cross-border mortgages are looking increasingly hard to come by

    The Journal  – Those working in the North and living in the Republic have limited options at present when it comes to mortgage finance. TWO YEARS AGO, Ireland’s Department of Finance transposed the EU’s Mortgage Credit Directive into Irish law. There was some fear at the time that among those to suffer due to the new Read more >

  • 12/09/2018
    Reality Check: A plan to unlock the Irish border problem

    BBC  – The Irish border is the single biggest sticking point at this stage of the Brexit negotiations. The prime minister has pledged to leave the EU’s customs union and single market but at the same time has promised no hardening of the border. That means no new physical infrastructure and no new checks or Read more >

  • 09/08/2018
    Hard Brexit, No Deal and the Northern Ireland Backstop: What Next for Brexit Negotiations?

    Irish Association for Contemporary European Studies  – Brexit (still) means Brexit. Yet, the problem the UK Prime Minister Theresa May faces is that the Chequers Deal is too soft for Brexiteers and not soft enough for Remainers. The UK has experienced some political instability with the resignation of senior Cabinet Ministers and narrow governmental wins Read more >

  • 09/08/2018
    What Brexit means for 20-year-old agreement

    Irish Examiner Brexit, whatever it achieves for the UK, does little for Ireland and runs the risk of deepening divisions on the island, writes Richard Humphreys. The Good Friday Agreement, signed 20 years ago, was meant to mark a new start to relationships within these islands. But the promise of the agreement is under challenge as Read more >

  • 08/08/2018
    Northern Irish students’ organisation calls for referendum on Brexit deal

    Independent ‘The fallout from Brexit has been disastrous and deeply unsettling for Northern Ireland’ An organisation representing tens of thousands of students in Northern Ireland is calling for a people’s vote on the Brexit deal, amid “massive uncertainty” around tuition fees across the border. Olivia Potter-Hughes, president of the National Union of Students-Union of Students in Ireland (NUS-USI) – which Read more >

  • 07/08/2018
    Confidence in May takes a nosedive as fears over Border policing increase

    Irish Independent Confidence in British Prime Minister Theresa May‘s handling of Brexit is plummeting, as concerns about the policing of the Border mount. A new poll, carried out by the ORB International pollster, shows confidence in the Tory leader has dropped considerably, with 60pc of UK voters not confident Mrs May will get the right deal. Read more >

  • 26/07/2018
    Brexit and the North: making a bad situation worse

    The Irish Times  – In the year when we mark 20 years since the signing of the Belfast Agreement, it is important to note that Northern Ireland has changed and in some ways, changed utterly. The shadow of political violence has substantially dissipated since the dark days of the Troubles. In other ways however, progress has Read more >

  • 23/07/2018
    How will Brexit affect Irish citizens in the UK?

    freemovement The government’s view is that Brexit will not affect Irish citizens at all. On 21 June 2018 the government published details of its plan to offer settled status to EU citizens who currently live in the United Kingdom. It confirmed the government’s position that Irish citizens have a general right to live in the United Kingdom Read more >

  • 17/07/2018
    Q&A: The Irish border Brexit backstop

    BBC News As the UK races towards its Brexit date in March 2019, one question is being asked louder and louder – how do you solve a problem like the Irish border? The UK and the EU both agree they want to avoid a hard border but can’t agree on how to do that. An Read more >

  • 16/07/2018
    Irish citizens in NI could lose EU rights post-Brexit – warning

    The Irish Times Residents of Northern Ireland risk losing citizenship rights linked to the Belfast Agreement due to new policies being drafted for Brexit, campaigners have warned. The 1998 Good Friday peace deal allows those born in Northern Ireland to be British, Irish or both, thereby also providing the rights of citizens of the European Union (EU). But under new Brexit proposals, Read more >

  • 03/07/2018
    Brexit talks CANNOT progress: Tusk says Irish border must be solved before UK can move on

    Express DEADLOCKED Brexit negotiations will not progress until the United Kingdom can provide a satisfactory answer to the Irish border conundrum, according to European Council President Donald Tusk. The EU’s most senior official posed the threat while briefing MEPs on last week’s European Council summit in Brussels, in which Brexit appeared as a insignificant footnote Read more >

  • 27/06/2018
    Irish border residents plead for deal over Brexit

    Belfast Telegraph The lack of a deal over the Irish border after Britain leaves the EU has been condemned as a ‘mess’. People living on the border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland have urged European leaders not to desert them, saying that a deal over the UK’s departure from the EU must Read more >

  • 20/06/2018
    NI security at risk if UK kicked out of EU extradition system, warns police chief.

    PSNI Chief Constable George Hamilton has said the European Arrest Warrant (EAW) is critical in the fight against crime after EU chief negotiator Michel Barnier warned the UK would be kicked out of the system after Brexit. Mr Hamilton said the removal of the system, which allows EU members to request the arrest and detention Read more >

  • 11/06/2018
    Greater fear of Brexit in food and drink sector, says Ibec

    The Irish Times Food Drink Ireland finds sector better prepared for UK’s exit despite customs cost woes More than eight out of 10 food and drink companies fear Brexit’s impact but are better prepared for the United Kingdom’s departure from the European Union than other businesses, employers’ group Ibec says. Food Drink Ireland, the Ibec subdivision Read more >

  • 31/05/2018
    Judge concerned over cross-border convictions

    BBC Convictions from summonses posted to people in the Republic of Ireland could be unlawful, a district judge has said. Mr Justice John Meehan made his remarks following two recent cases where residents of the Republic attended his court. He said their summonses were not legal as they did not have a “proof of service” Read more >

  • 24/05/2018
    Brexit: MPs warn border remains a “cause for concern”

    BBC News A lack of clarity of what the Irish border will look like after Brexit remains a “cause for concern”, MPs have warned the government. The warning is contained in a report from Westminster’s Brexit committee. Members of the cross-party House of Commons committee visited the border region in December 2017. The committee’s latest report Read more >

  • 22/05/2018
    EU invests €8.8 million euros in cross border acute hospital services

    13,000 patients to benefit from cross border services An €8.8 million EU INTERREG VA funded cross-border project has been launched today. The CAWT Acute Services Project has recently secured this EU funding to assess and treat higher volumes of patients more effectively through improvements to and modernisation of current service delivery models. This EU funding Read more >

  • 22/05/2018
    Brexit: NI parties unite in EU border appeal

    BBC Northern Ireland should remain in the single market and customs union after Brexit, four political parties have said. Sinn Féin, the Green Party, Alliance and the SDLP have issued a joint statement. They said there should be no hard border on the island of Ireland or between Ireland and the UK. “This is critical Read more >

  • 21/05/2018
    Brexit: NI survey shows support for single market

    BBC News A new survey suggests that people in Northern Ireland want to stay within the European Union’s single market and customs union. Researchers at Queens University Belfast carried out the project. It provides in-depth analysis into public attitudes within Northern Ireland towards the UK’s exit from the EU. The project surveyed more than 1,000 Read more >

  • 10/05/2018
    ‘Studying in Britain not feasible if fees rise’

    Irish Independent The 350 Irish student nurses in Buckinghamshire New University are some of the beating hearts that make up a human bridge between Ireland and the UK. It is a link that can be traced back for generations, and which Brexit threatens to sever. The ‘Bucks’ students are among about 10,000 Irish currently pursuing Read more >

  • 12/03/2018
    Beyond Brexit: Artist exposes our ‘eerie’ Border fault line

    The Irish Times The ordinariness of Irish Border crossings and uncertainty of what might happen to them after Brexit attracted artist David Fox to capture them in a dozen paintings. The 31-year-old Tullamore artist had been living in Belfast for six years and regularly crossed the Border during that time on his motorbike travelling home Read more >

  • 05/03/2018
    Report highlights concerns of young people over Brexit

    Belfast Telegraph A generation of young people is warning that they will have to live with the full impact of Brexit, having never voted on its outcome. A report on the views, hopes and fears of young people who are living on both sides of the border will be handed to members of the British-Irish Read more >

  • 07/02/2018
    Unique Cross Border Conference welcomes Minister for Foreign Affairs Simon Coveney

    Dundalk Chamber At a unique conference, the first of its kind, attended by almost 400 people, Minister for Foreign Affairs and keynote speaker, Simon Coveney was heartened to see the continuing close working relationships enjoyed by Louth County Council, Newry, Mourne & Down District Council, the Newry and Dundalk Chambers of Commerce, InterTradeIreland and Local Read more >

  • 07/02/2018
    Police chief says ‘hard Brexit’ Irish border would be paramilitary target

    The Guardian Northern Ireland’s top police officer has warned that border posts and security installations created as a result of a “hard Brexit” would be seen as “fair game” for attack by violent dissident republicans. The chief constable of the Police Service of Northern Ireland said he feared that a fortified frontier that would have to be Read more >

  • 29/01/2018
    Eures Cross Border Partnership & Dundalk Chamber to host Lunch Time Seminar

    EURES Business Lunch on Employment Incentives    

  • 23/01/2018
    Karen Bradley ‘pragmatic’ on post-Brexit border

    BBC The Northern Ireland Secretary has said it “simply isn’t tenable” to have different agricultural rules for one side of a field from the other side of a field after Brexit. Karen Bradley was giving evidence to the House of Lords EU Committee. She was asked about sectors where UK and EU rules would need Read more >

  • 14/12/2017
    Brexit secretary wants frictionless border ‘regardless of trade deal’

    10 December 2017, BBC News. The UK is committed to maintaining a “frictionless” border with Ireland, regardless of whether a deal is struck to leave the EU, David Davis has said. The Brexit secretary added Friday’s UK-EU agreement was conditional on reaching an “over-arching” trade deal. He described the agreement as “a statement of intent” rather than a Read more >

  • 21/11/2017
    ‘An absolute shambles’: readers on the Irish border and Brexit

    20 November 2017, The Guardian. Ireland has said it will block progress of Brexit negotiations in December, unless the UK give a formal written guarantee there will be no hard border with Northern Ireland. The Guardian view on Brexit and the Irish border: Britain’s shameful dereliction From the referendum campaign onwards, Brexiters have ignored the dire Read more >

  • 24/10/2017
    ‘First big win of Brexit as common travel area to be retained’ – Coveney

    24 October 2017, The Irish Independent Ireland will retain the common travel area (CTA) with the UK in the first landmark agreement to be hammered out under the Brexit talks. The impending CTA agreement, being hailed as a major victory for Ireland in the Brexit negotiations, will not include Border issues but will resolve a Read more >

  • 17/10/2017
    No Brexit deal will bring hard Irish border, Starmer says

    15 October 2017, BBC A failure to reach a deal in the Brexit talks would inevitably lead to a so-called hard Irish border, according to Sir Keir Starmer. The Labour Party’s shadow Brexit secretary said a no-deal scenario would be “catastrophic” for Ireland. The UK has until March 2019 – the date when it is Read more >

  • 17/10/2017
    Wait No Longer: How Donegal patients can get more immediate cross-border care

    17 October 2017, Donegal Daily. Thousands of people on waiting lists for treatment in Donegal are being reminded that they may be eligible to go to Northern Ireland under an EU Cross Border directive. The ‘well kept secret’, as described by Marian Harkin MEP, means that in and out-patients currently on hospital waiting lists can Read more >

  • 02/10/2017
    Donegal dependence on frequent Border crossings revealed

    26 September 2017, The Irish Independent. With the UK and EU grappling to find a solution to the Border post-Brexit, a new report sets out the extent of the movement and links between the two parts of this island, and between Ireland and Britain. The study shows that an estimated 110 million Border crossings take Read more >

  • 27/09/2017
    Can mobile roaming be saved after Brexit?

    The London School of Economics and Political Science The EU referendum has many unanticipated consequences. One that is gaining visibility in the UK just now is the impact of Brexit on mobile roaming arrangements. UK citizens should not count on continuing to enjoy inexpensive mobile roaming when travelling in EU Member States unless measures are Read more >

  • 14/09/2017
    NI peace projects could still receive EU cash after Brexit through Dublin

    13 September 2017, Belfast Telegraph Northern Ireland peace projects could continue to receive EU funding after Brexit, with money funnelled through the Republic of Ireland, a committee of Irish parliamentarians proposed. Programmes to prevent inter-community conflict, promote reconciliation, cross-border cooperation and the development of infrastructure and jobs should be protected amid heightened political and economic Read more >

  • 01/09/2017
    Major breakthrough in Irish strand of Brexit talks

    1 September 2017, The Irish Times. British side guarantees free movement of all EU citizens between Ireland and Britain A British guarantee to preserve free movement of all European Union citizens between Ireland and Britain has resulted in a significant breakthrough in the Irish strand of the Brexit negotiations. The commitment, the European Commission said Read more >

  • 31/08/2017
    Barnier says Brexit Irish border talks ‘fruitful’ but no decisive progress

    31 August 2017, The Belfast Telegraph. Talks on how to resolve the issue of the border between Northern Ireland and the Republic have been “fruitful” however, there has been no “decisive progress” in the overall Brexit talks, the EU’s chief negotiator has said. Michel Barnier said the EU and the UK were still “quite far” Read more >

  • 28/08/2017
    Taoiseach ‘very confident’ of no Border passport controls post-Brexit

    28 August 2017, The Irish Times. Taoiseach Leo Varadkar has said he remains very confident there will be no need for passport controls on the Irish Border post-Brexit. Mr Varadkar was responding to concerns raised by former president Mary McAleese, who questioned how the EU and UK could differentiate between Irish citizens, who are set to be Read more >

  • 23/08/2017
    London keen to maintain EU accord over civil court cases

    23 August 2017, Belfast Telegraph. Cross-border divorce and child custody battles and business disputes could become messier and lengthier unless Britain can secure agreement to maintain judicial co-operation arrangements with the EU after Brexit. In a paper published ahead of talks in Brussels next week, the UK Government says that it is “vital” for millions Read more >

  • 23/08/2017
    Ireland won’t be used as a pawn in Brexit talks, says Brokenshire

    23 August 2017, Irish Independent. The UK government isn’t playing a game in relation to Ireland in the Brexit talks, the Northern Ireland Secretary of State has said. Amid claims from the Government here that it won’t allow the country to be used as a pawn and could stall the talks unless it is happy Read more >

  • 18/08/2017
    UK Brexit position paper opposes Irish border posts

    16 August 2017, BBC News The government has said there must be an “unprecedented solution” for the border between Northern Ireland and the Republic after Brexit. A paper detailing its proposals focuses on the need to avoid a hard border. The government stresses there should be no physical infrastructure, such as customs posts, at the border, which has Read more >

  • 18/08/2017
    Want to avail of the Cross Border Healthcare Directive? Here’s how

    30 June 2017, Sunday Business Post. Give me the gist of this EU directive? Groundbreaking EU legislation means that you have the right to receive medical treatment in another EU member state (including the North) and skip Irish waiting lists. The HSE must foot your bill. What does this new legislation cover? Virtually all elective Read more >

  • 01/08/2017
    Brexit and the Irish Border dilemma

    31 July 2017, The Irish Times More than a year after the Brexit referendum in the UK, we are little wiser about how Britain’s exit from the EU will actually be organised. One of the most sensitive issues for Ireland is the Border and the fear that despite reassuring noises from London and Brussels – and from many other EU capitals Read more >

  • 01/08/2017
    Driving bans mutually recognised on both sides of Irish border

    1 August 2017, Belfast Telegraph Driving disqualifications have become mutually recognised on both sides of the Irish border. Laws changed in Northern Ireland and the Republic on Tuesday to give effect to a road safety agreement signed between the UK and Irish governments in 2015. Those who receive a driving ban on the other side Read more >

  • 20/07/2017
    ‘Flexible and imaginative’ approach to Irish border needed to maintain common travel area

    18 July 2017, The Irish Independent. Addressing the impact of Brexit on the relationship between Northern Ireland and the Irish Republic will require “flexible and imaginative solutions”, David Davis acknowledged as Brussels said more work needed to be done on the issue. The European Union’s chief negotiator Michel Barnier said the Government had to clarify Read more >

  • 19/07/2017
    Brexit is the ‘chess game of our lives,’ says Emily O’Reilly

    17 July 2017, The Irish Times British-Irish Parliamentary Assembly hears ‘frictionless, seamless’ border is possible European Ombudsman Emily O’Reilly has described the ongoing Brexitnegotiations as “the chess game of our lives”. As the second round of formal talks got underway in Brussels on Monday, Ms O’Reilly told a gathering of British and Irish parliamentarians in Kilkenny Read more >

  • 19/07/2017
    Brexit ‘exacerbates’ NI divisions, says House of Lords

    19 July 2017, BBC News The Brexit debate appears to have “exacerbated cross-community divisions” in Northern Ireland, a House of Lords report has said. The Lords EU Committee has been examining the impact of Brexit on the UK’s devolved institutions. It said Northern Ireland will be “profoundly affected” because of its distinctive circumstances. Statistical analysis Read more >

  • 18/07/2017
    A frictionless Border is impossible, an invisible one undesirable

    15 July 2017, The Irish Times Michel Barnier’s recent dismissal of the notion of “frictionless” trade between the UK and EU after Brexit has direct ramifications for one of the most complex problems faced by the Brexit negotiators: how to manage the Irish Border. The UK government has frequently emphasised its desire to see the continuation of Read more >

  • 18/07/2017
    Brexit: Coveney says ‘tech alone will not solve border issue’

    17 July 2017, BBC News Technical solutions alone will not solve the problem of the Irish border after Brexit, the Irish minister for foreign affairs has said. Simon Coveney was speaking in Brussels. He also stressed the importance of free movement of people, goods and services. Brexit Secretary David Davis has repeatedly mentioned trusted trader Read more >

  • 06/07/2017
    Brexit: All you need to know about the UK leaving the EU

    27 June 2017, BBC News. What does it mean for Northern Ireland? The land border between Northern Ireland and EU member the Republic of Ireland is likely to be a key part of the Brexit talks. There is currently a common travel area between the UK and the Republic. Like Scotland, Northern Ireland voted to Read more >

  • 05/07/2017
    Brexit may be a disaster for Ireland, but solutions can be found to minimise damage from its impact

    5 July 2017, The Irish Independent Put simply, Brexit is a disaster for Ireland. Despite assertions of some commentators, there are very few – if any – positives for Ireland. Minimising and managing the impact on Ireland of this decision will be arguably the most significant challenge the State has faced in its short history. Read more >

  • 27/06/2017
    Good news for border counties with the end of EU roaming charges

    13 June 2017, The Irish News. MOBILE phone roaming charges across the EU are set to finally end this week amid warnings to consumers to check their tariffs and remain aware of unexpected costs. People living in border counties in Ireland, such as Derry, Tyrone, Fermanagh and Armagh, will be among those to reap the Read more >

  • 17/05/2017
    Border checks to rise tenfold after Brexit

    17 May 2017, The Irish Examiner Brexit will trigger a tenfold increase in customs declarations on Irish soil and fresh checkpoints close to the border are being considered for when Britain leaves the EU, the head of Revenue has said. A top civil servant overseeing Ireland’s Brexit negotiations admitted that the Government did not seek Read more >

  • 28/02/2017
    Seminar on the Impact of Brexit on Citizens Rights

    28 March 2017, Belfast 5 Takeaways on Brexit – Outlining Possible Scenarios for a New UK-EU Relationship and their Impact on Citizens This event is a part of the project Brexit Takeaways, which aims to provide citizens with evidence-based information on how the final deal reached between the EU and the UK might impact their rights, in Read more >

  • 22/02/2017
    No special deal possible to stop the return of Border controls

    The Irish Times, 20 February 2017. Checks are inevitable once the North joins the rest of Britain outside EU customs union There have been some suggestions in Ireland, since the Brexit vote of June 23rd, to the effect that Ireland and the UK ought to be allowed to cut a special deal to avoid the Read more >

  • 16/02/2017
    Enda Kenny confident ‘divisive border’ will not be reimposed after Brexit

    Belfast Telegraph, 15 February 2017. Enda Kenny is confident the European Union will not allow “one of the most divisive borders in the world” to be reimposed on the island of Ireland after Brexit. In what has been billed as a major policy speech, the Taoiseach said Ireland has “no choice” but to successfully resist Read more >

  • 07/02/2017
    UK tourists face mobile roaming charges post-Brexit

    6 Feburary 2017,  theguardian.com, Leaked document says EU ban on roaming charges due to come into effect in June will not apply to UK travellers British tourists will have to pay mobile phone operators’ roaming charges when they travel in the EU after Brexit, according to the European parliament committee that helped pioneer the legislation. Read more >

  • 24/01/2017
    Your crash course in… What history can teach us about a return to customs checks with the North

    22 January 2017, thejournal.ie   UK PRIME MINISTER Theresa May said this week that maintaining the common travel area between the Republic and Northern Ireland was high on her agenda for Brexit. However, May made it clear that Britain will not remain a full member of the EU customs union or single market. Instead, it Read more >

  • 14/01/2017
    Dutch woman resident in UK for 30 years may have to leave after Brexit

    14 January 2017, The Guardian, Jet Cooper, who has raised three children here and whose husband is ill, told she may not qualify for permanent residency without private health insurance. A Dutch woman who has lived with her British husband in Devon for 30 years has learned from the immigration minister, Robert Goodwill, that she Read more >

  • 10/01/2017
    Peace process is central to Brexit talks – Hogan

    9 January 2017, The Irish Independent. Phil Hogan tells John Downing the EU has a ‘vested interest’ and talks must centre on special case for our island Irish hopes of avoiding a “hard border” with the North after Brexit centre on the EU conceding a special case for treating the entire island as a single Read more >

  • 10/01/2017
    The Brexit fallout for EU citizens in the UK, and Britons in the EU – Q&A

    18 December 2016, The Guardian. EU citizens in the UK and British expats are concerned about what will happen after Brexit. The politicians have so far done little to reassure them. Are the rights of EU citizens living in the UK and British expats living in Europe automatically protected? During the EU referendum campaign, senior Read more >

  • 10/01/2017
    Scrap insurance rule for stay-at-home parents from EU, says Tory MP

    30 December 2016, The Guardian. Little-known health insurance requirement risks disqualifying EU citizens such as carers and students from UK residency. Ministers should scrap strict immigration rules that risk disqualifying EU citizens such as stay-at-home parents and students from securing permanent residency in the UK if they have not taken out private health insurance, according Read more >

  • 14/12/2016
    The Guardian view on Brexit and Ireland: special relationship, special solution

    12 December 2016, The Guardian It can probably be assumed that most leave voters gave little thought to the consequences of Brexit for Ireland. Had they done so, they might have thought twice about what they were setting in train; for those consequences are wide ranging and potentially very serious. Of the many historic irresponsibilities Read more >

  • 17/11/2016
    Brexit: ‘No iron curtain at Irish border’ expert says

    17 November 2016, BBC News The UK leaving the European customs union would not create an “iron curtain” at the Irish border a leading academic has said. Prof Michael Dougan said that it would mean “an enormous amount of paperwork” for Northern Ireland businesses. The UK will have to decide if it will leave the Read more >

  • 17/11/2016
    EU Commission reveals plans for ‘travel tax’ on British citizens after Brexit

    17 November 2016, The Independent. The system would also mean UK citizens having to fill out a form to travel to an EU country British people will no longer be able to travel freely to Europe without paying a “travel tax” and being forced to fill out a form under plans unveiled by Brussels. The Read more >

  • 09/11/2016
    EU citizenship proposal could guarantee rights in Europe after Brexit

    9 November 2016, The Guardian Plan would ensure freedom to live, travel and work for nationals of countries that have left the union – including Britons. The European parliament is to review a proposal for an associate EU citizenship open to nationals of a country that has left the union but who want to stay Read more >

  • 08/11/2016
    No change for rights of Irish citizens in UK, says David Davis

    7 November 2016, Belfast Telegraph. Irish citizens are expected to have their special status in the UK protected post-Brexit, according to David Davis. The Brexit Secretary told MPs he believes there will be no change to what is enshrined in law in the Ireland Act 1949. This legislation established the special status in which the Read more >

  • 01/11/2016
    Irish border to top agenda at Brexit summit

    1 November 2016, Sky News With bilateral trade between Ireland and the UK topping £1.35bn a week, the Irish fear Brexit could devastate their economy Ireland’s Prime Minister will today host an unprecedented cross-border summit to address fears about the impact of Brexit on travel, trade, the economy and security. Enda Kenny TD has invited Read more >

  • 26/10/2016
    Brexit: Pound’s fall pays dividend for NI border towns

    26 October 2016, BBC News Northern Ireland border towns are enjoying a surge in business, with visitors from the Republic of Ireland cashing in on the pound’s low rate. One Newry shopping centre has seen a 62% jump in customers from across the border. The boom has been fuelled by sterling’s decrease in value – Read more >

  • 26/10/2016
    Reality Check: What does Brexit mean for the Irish border?

    25 July 2016, BBC News. Theresa May has visited Northern Ireland for the first time since taking over as prime minister. As home secretary campaigning to stay in the European Union, she described it as “inconceivable” that Brexit would not lead to changes to the border arrangements between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland. Read more >

  • 25/10/2016
    How could the Brexit vote affect farming and food in Northern Ireland?

    24 October 2016, Northern Ireland Assembly Research and Information Service. The agri-food sector is a significant one for the economy and employment in Northern Ireland. For a number of reasons, the implications of the vote to leave the EU are difficult to gauge at this stage, but this article attempts to sketch out some of the Read more >

  • 21/10/2016
    Law may be needed to preserve the rights of Irish in UK after Brexit

    19 October 2016, The Guardian. Assumed ‘special status’ for Irish citizens not guaranteed when Britain leaves the EU, says expert. The rights of Irish citizens to emigrate to Britain will need to be enshrined in law if their assumed “special status” is to continue, according to legal experts. The Irish have more rights than other Read more >

  • 20/10/2016
    Young Irish think twice about living in Britain after Brexit

    19 October 2016, The Guardian. Economics and rising intolerance mean many millennials are reconsidering their plans to work or study in the UK. It didn’t take long for Ciaran Coyle to understand what the outcome of the EU referendum meant. Just a few hours in fact. The young Irishman was discussing the repercussions of the Read more >

  • 18/10/2016
    Brexit should not lead to a hard Border, May tells NI Executive

    18 October 2016.  Irish Times. The British prime minister Theresa May has written to First Minister Arlene Foster and Deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness repeating her commitment that Brexit should not lead to a hard Border between NorthernIreland and the Republic. In letters dated last Friday, October 14th, Ms May responded to the joint letter Read more >

  • 18/10/2016
    Brexit: UK and Irish governments work on keeping open border

    10 October 2016, BBC The UK is talking to the Irish government to determine the technical mechanism to maintain an open border and underpin the Good Friday Agreement, the Brexit secretary has said. David Davis said the government would maintain the Common Travel Area and all the benefits it had in Northern Ireland before the Read more >

  • 15/09/2016
    Irish passports surge as British travel visas loom

    13 Sept 2016, Irish Independent. Applications in Britain for Irish passports more than doubled last month compared with the same period last year, as the post-Brexit interest in Irish citizenship continued. Taoiseach Enda Kenny believes the surging interest will continue amid reports that Britons may need a visa, or at the very least may have Read more >

  • 15/09/2016
    UK does not want ‘hard’ Border in Ireland, says NI secretary

    13 Sept 2016, Irish Times. No decision yet on future British link with EU customs union, says James Brokenshire The British government has made no decision about its future relationship with the EU customs union, according to Northern secretary James Brokenshire. That decision will have a direct impact on the status of the Border between Read more >

  • 14/09/2016
    Blue passport may actually be reintroduced once Britain leaves EU

    14 Sept 2016, Independent. Home Office hints that it is considering the idea The Home Office has hinted that old-style blue British passports could make a comeback if the UK leaves the European Union. The colour of UK citizens’ travel documents has been the subject of intense debate since the country voted for Brexit on 23 Read more >

  • 14/09/2016
    Jean-Claude Juncker says Brexit talks must start ‘as soon as possible’

    14 Sept 2016, Independent. Brexit talks should begin “as soon as possible”, the President of the European Commission has said, adding that the European Union is facing a battle for survival against nationalism in Europe. Delivering a “State of the Union” speech to the European Parliament in Strasbourg, which sought to ease tensions and rally support for the EU, Jean-Claude Read more >

  • 13/09/2016
    UK will not have access to the EU market if it ends free movement, says Irish Prime Minister

    14 Sept 2016, Independent. ‘Let me tell you that around the European Council table, that is an issue that will not be given in on,’ says the Irish Taoiseach. The UK will not have full access to the EU single market if they don’t allow the free movement of people, the Irish Taoiseach Enda Kenny Read more >

  • 13/09/2016
    ‘Ireland cautious about British border reassurances’ – Flanagan

    12 Sept 2016, The Irish News. IRELAND is cautious of British reassurances there will be no hard or heavily militarised border on the island after Brexit, Dublin’s Foreign Affairs Minister has warned. On the eve of Northern Ireland Secretary James Brokenshire’s first official visit to Dublin, Charles Flanagan said the fate of the 310-mile frontier will Read more >

  • 12/09/2016
    Car lease dismay for cross-border workers

    9 Sept 2016, Derry Journal. Western Trust health workers living in Donegal have expressed dismay after being told the cars they are leasing in the north for work are no longer exempt from registration tax. Employees from the Western Trust say they are now trapped in a nightmare because their cars are leased from northern Read more >

  • 07/09/2016
    ‘No threat to Britain’ from open border with Ireland

    7 Sept 2016, Irish Independent. An open border between Northern Ireland and the Republic post Brexit wouldn’t pose a risk to Britain in terms of immigration, Ireland’s ambassador to London has insisted. Addressing the House of Lords EU Select Committee, Dan Mulhall said any effort to control the free movement of people on the island, Read more >

  • 05/09/2016
    Brexit: How would cross-border customs work?

    5 Sept 2016, BBC. Despite the sunny weather there is a sense of gloom in Dublin – both about the European Commission ruling on Apple and about Brexit. The Irish government has worries about how the UK vote will affect the common travel area that preceded both states joining the European Union, the estimated 1bn Read more >

  • 31/08/2016
    ‘Brexit means Brexit’ – May rules out second EU referendum

    31 August 2016, RTE. British prime minister Theresa May has set her face firmly against a second referendum on the UK’s membership of the European Union, telling cabinet colleagues that “Brexit means Brexit” and there will be no attempt to stay in the EU “by the back door”. Ms May was speaking at her country Read more >

  • 31/08/2016
    Ryanair flights hit by Brexit despite falling prices

    31 Aug 2016, Independent. Following the EU referendum there will be around five million fewer seats to and from the UK than originally planned Ryanair has cut its annual growth rate for UK flights from 15 per cent this year to 6 per cent next year because of the decision to leave the European Union. As Read more >

  • 26/08/2016
    Despite Brexit, we must keep alive the friendly ties binding us to Britain

    25 Aug 2016, Irish Independent. It almost feels as if nothing has changed since the UK referendum on EU membership. You can’t (yet) hear the job losses or see the disinvestment. But all is far from well. In the weeks since the referendum, the pound has collapsed, UK property values have declined, new investment and Read more >

  • 23/08/2016
    Planned cross-border air route downed by Brexit vote

    20 Aug 2016, Belfast Telegraph. The impact of Brexit has contributed to a potential air link between City of Derry and Dublin airports being ruled out, it has been announced. Isle of Man airline Citywing was to start up the link using money from the Government’s regional air connectivity fund. But City of Derry Airport Read more >

  • 18/08/2016
    Brexit hitting tourism in Border counties

    16 Aug 2016, Irish Independent. Brexit is now having a serious impact on tourism as visitors from the UK are abandoning plans to come on holiday here, hoteliers have warned. Paul Diver, chair of the Irish Hotels Federation branch in Co Donegal, says a “serious” decline in visitors from the North is hitting the trade. Read more >

  • 10/08/2016
    Brussels unlikely to offer any concessions on freedom of movement

    8 Aug 2016, The Guardian. Roderick Abbott, former ambassador to WTO, says Brussels is very unlikely to offer any concessions on freedom of movement. The UK could strike a trade deal with the European Union within two years but will struggle to win concessions on free movement of labour, according to one of Britain’s most experienced Read more >

  • 01/08/2016
    Northern Ireland gets Brexit boost as shoppers rush across border to spend

    1 Aug 2016,  Daily Express. THE Brexit vote has boosted business in Northern Ireland from shoppers across the UK’s only EU land border, a leading retailer has said. The number from the south visiting Newry in Co Down is up 50 per cent since the June referendum as the pound slid in value against the Read more >

  • 28/07/2016
    10 things we now know about Brexit…that we didn’t know a month ago

    27 Jul 2016, Irish Independent. 1   Bookies and money markets also get things horribly wrong  Opinion polls were discredited in Britain during the 2015 general election. They predicted a hung parliament, but David Cameron’s Conservatives won an overall majority. Polls right up to June 23 unconvincingly suggested a narrow win for Remain. But Remain advocates Read more >

  • 27/07/2016
    The Border issue involves principles that matter to the UK and EU states

    27 Jul 2016, Irish Independent. I moved from Belfast to Bray in 1976 and remember following the furniture van containing all my worldly goods, ready to present a list of them to Irish Customs. It was a pouring wet day but the Customs officer insisted on the worldly goods being unloaded, to make sure the television Read more >

  • 22/07/2016
    A few in Westminster begin looking at border controls

    22 Jul 2016,  Irish Times. Northern Secretary James Brokenshire says Common Travel Area will be top of his agenda Before the referendum, Irish politicians and other public figures warned of the many adverse consequences of Brexit for the British-Irish relationship, political, economic and social. Chief among the concerns was the future of the Common Travel Read more >

  • 12/07/2016
    Angela Merkel all but rules out making Ireland a ‘special case’ in post-Brexit negotiations with Britain

    Irish Independent. GERMAN Chancellor Angela Merkel has all but ruled out making Ireland a ‘special case’ in the post ‘Brexit’ negotiations with Britain. Ms Merkel today twice declined to issue such guarantees, adding that Ireland’s concerns will treated on par with those of the remaining 27 EU member states. But Ms Merkel did give a Read more >

  • 06/07/2016
    Brexit may not impact common travel area, expert claims

    6 Jul 2016, Irish Times. The UK is unlikely to impose Border controls following vote to leave the EU, professor says The common travel area between the Republic and the UK is likely to remain post-Brexit, but the status of the Irish in the UK may need to be reviewed, according to a migration expert. The Read more >

  • 01/07/2016
    Work to begin on ‘challenges’ relating to Northern Ireland border with Republic in preparation for Brexit

    26 Jun 2016, Belfast Telegraph. Outgoing Prime Minister David Cameron has said talks are to begin with the Irish government on the “challenges” over the border with Northern Ireland in preparation for the UK’s departure from the EU. He also said the European Union exit negotiations will involve Northern Ireland, alongside the Scottish and Welsh administrations. Read more >

  • 01/07/2016
    Brexit: Health service impact concerns Minister Michelle O’Neill

    30 Jun 2016,  BBC. Health Minister Michelle O’Neill has said she has “real fears” about the impact a UK exit from the EU could have on Northern Ireland’s health service. Although the region voted by 56% to 44% to stay in the EU in last week’s poll, the UK as a whole voted to leave. Read more >

  • 20/06/2016
    EU Referendum: Concern growing over restoration of border controls

    20 Jun 2016, Belfast Telegraph. People are becoming increasingly concerned about the restoration of border controls if Britain leaves the European Union. The Ipsos MORI poll shows that almost a third of voters believe the appearance of checkpoints on the road to Dublin, or at our ports and airports, is the likely result of a Brexit. Read more >

  • 09/06/2016
    Briefing Paper – EU Referendum & Free Movement of People

    Centre for Cross Border Studies, June 2016. The UK referendum on continued membership of the EU will take place on 23rd June 2016. One of the key issues imbedded in the referendum is the UK’s intention to limit the free movement of people, one of the EU’s four principal freedoms, together with the free movement Read more >

  • 01/06/2016
    Border assurances ‘do not stand up’, says Bertie Ahern

    1 Jun 2016, The Irish Times. Northern Secretary Theresa Villiers’s assurances about free movement between Britain and the Republic continuing unaffected if Britain leaves the EU “do not stand up one bit”, former taoiseach Bertie Ahern has said. His remarks came after former PSNI chief constable Hugh Orde said Ms Villiers “continues to keep her head firmly Read more >

  • 01/03/2016
    Brexit to trigger return of NI cross-Border Controls

    1 Mar 2016, Irish Times. Border controls with the North would be reimposed if Britain left the European Union, a British government report has stated. The cabinet office report on the consequences of leaving the EU also warned that the future of the common travel area would be in doubt…..Irish Times  

  • 24/02/2016
    Brexit would leave householders facing massive food price hike

    24 Feb 2016, Irish News. The cost of food will rocket by at least 30 per cent without EU subsidy support, the future leader of the Ulster Farmers Union (UFU) has warned. Ivor Ferguson said Britain’s withdrawal from the Europe would be a “step into the darkness” that would create uncertainty for the north’s farmers. The Read more >

  • 24/02/2016
    Brexit could wipe 20% off the pound warns HSBC

    24 Feb 2016, The Guardian HSBC warns on Brexit perils Investment bank HSBC has issued a stark warning about the impact of Brexit on the UK economy. In a new research note, HSBC predicts that the pound would tumble, and the economy would grind to a near-standstill next year. It also fears that banks would face Read more >

Did you know...

The UK and Irish Governments have guaranteed the continued payment of pensions, child benefit and other social welfare payments under the CTA.

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