Post-Brexit referendum reactions

Click here to see a chronology of Boris Johnson comment pieces specifically relating to the EU and related issues - 2008/2016



THE TELEGRAPH

 * Ambrose Evans-Pritchard : UK and Europe face Mutual Assured Destruction if they botch Brexit - 23rd June
 * James Quinn: The Brexit campaign has been a war of numbers as much as words - but there are only four that really count - 23rd June
 * Allister Heath: A last-minute plea: vote Leave and help change the course of history - 23rd June
 * David Twiston Davies: Young Europhiles need to stop patronising their elders – we know the EU far better than you - 22nd June
 * James Kirkup: Remain's Project Sneer has laid bare the contempt politicians have for the uneducated riff-raff who elect them - 22nd June
 * Julia Hartley-Brewer:You don't need to trust politicians to vote for Brexit. Just trust yourself - 22nd June
 * John Napier: The risks of Remain are unacceptable to the British psyche - In the short run, Leave by definition has a disruptive or shock effect but is offset by the potential to give better long-term sustainable growth as we focus on more significant non-European markets - 22nd June
 * Allison Pearson: All over bar the voting... my A-to-Z guide to the EU referendum campaign - Win or lose, let’s pencil in a group hug for Friday morning - 22nd June
 * Bryony Gordon: Whatever the result of the EU referendum, please don't moan about it on Facebook - 22nd June
 * Daniel Hannan: Forget Project Fear. Be positive. Choose dynamism. Choose Brexit - 22nd June
 * Con Coughlin: Even if we leave Europe, we will still defend it - as we have always done - 22nd June
 * Philip Johnston: If you want to be in a reformed EU, then you have to vote to leave - 22nd June
 * Asa Bennett: Has George Osborne's punishment Budget terrified Britain into Remaining? - 21st June
 * William Wright: Leave's 110 City signatories do not represent the industry - So who are these City figures backing Brexit, and what is their case? - 21st June
 * Tony Lodge:Why Europe is to blame for the UK's acute energy policy failures - 21st June
 * Juliet Samuel: Sayeeda Warsi has had months to make her case for leaving the EU. Why the sudden change of heart? - 21st June
 * Michael Rose: Our best defence is to stand apart and save Europe by our example - 21st June
 * John McTernan: Jeremy Corbyn wants Labour voters to reluctantly Remain – has he finally captured the mood of the nation? - 21st June
 * Boris Johnson: Please Vote Leave on Thursday, because we'll never get this chance again - When you pick up your ballot paper this Thursday, you have it in your hands to transform Britain’s current democratic arrangements for the better - 20th June
 * Sir Michael Rake: Remain: 'Britain is thriving as a leading member of the EU' - 20th June
 * Michael Geoghegan: Leave: ‘It is absurd to suggest Britain cannot thrive outside the EU' - 20th June
 * Roger Bootle: Remain’s models are built on poor foundations - 20th June
 * Christopher Booker: Will Vote Leave's blunders lose us the day? - 19th June
 * Emran Mian: How can we better protect our MPs? - 19th June
 * Jeremy Warner: Anything goes in this Brexit battle of lies and untruths - 19th June
 * Liam Halligan: Despite such tragedy, the case for Brexit remains strong  - I’m voting Brexit because, economically speaking, the EU isn’t where it’s at - 19th June
 * Janet Daley: How did the Remain campaign get the British character so wrong? - How can these politicians, who have famously come through the most quintessentially British educational institutions and established channels of national life, possibly be so ignorant (and unappreciative) of the instincts and character of their electorate? - 19th June
 * Charles Moore: We face a very serious decision next week – but not a terribly difficult one - Experts, when they nearly all agree – as with the Munich Agreement, ERM entry, the euro and now a Remain vote – are likely to be wrong, because they confuse their own interests and group-think with the general good - 18th June
 * John Penrose: David Cameron's end to Europe's 'ever closer union' means Britain should Remain - 17th June
 * David Twiston Davies: Young Europhiles need to stop patronising their elders – we know the EU far better than you - 17th June
 * John Sawers: I am a former MI6 chief and a lifelong patriot. Here's why I'm voting Remain - 16th June
 * Jeremy Warner: It's easy to mock 'experts' and 'the establishment'. But stable government requires elites - Up until the financial crisis, this sort of mistrust of the “establishment view” was very much in the minority; where in evidence it was largely confined to the disaffected Left of the political spectrum. But with the advent of the In/Out referendum it has gone mainstream in a way I’ve never witnessed before - 17th June
 * Charles Grant: Unnoticed by Brexiteers, the idea of an EU super-state is quietly dying - 16th June
 * Mark Brolin: It's no wonder young students love the EU. They're being indoctrinated - 16th June
 * Caroline Criado-Perez: EU referendum: For any woman who values workplace equality, there's only one way to vote - 16th June
 * Tim Stanley: The Europhiles have finally snapped and Brexit is looking increasingly likely - 16th June
 * Ambrose Evans-Pritchard : Osborne's 'punishment Budget' is economic vandalism - 16th June
 * Paul Marshall: IMF suffers from groupthink on subject of the EU - 16th June
 * Allister Heath: It will all end in tears for the first kamikaze chancellor in history - 15th June
 * Juliet Samuel: The referendum is a wake-up call: if Europe does not bend, it will break - 15th June
 * James Kirkup: EU Facts: How credible is George Osborne's threat of £30 billion of cuts and taxes after Brexit? - 15th June
 * Rupert Smith: Europe is not a threat to our defences. It's the only way we can maintain them - 15th June
 * Asa Bennett: Has George Osborne's Brexit Budget ruined his last chance of becoming prime minister? - 15th June
 * Simon Hix: If Britain leaves the EU, it really will become the superstate of every Brexiteer's nightmares - 15th June
 * Frank Luntz: Leave is ahead because British voters no longer trust their elites - 15th June
 * Juliet Samuel, Tim Stanley and James Kirkup: Boris Johnson at the Telegraph EU debate: the key moments that tell us who will win the EU referendum - 14th June
 * Ben Wright: Don't look to the breathless (and clueless) markets for Brexit predictions - 14th June
 * Philip Johnston: Why I'll be voting to leave the EU next week - The argument that we are in the club and should just obey the rules is fatuous, because the rules and the membership have changed so much since we joined - 15th June
 * Con Coughlin: An EU army is not just a stupid idea – it's a grave threat to our own security - 15th June
 * Jeremy Warner: Let's not sleepwalk into economic and geopolitical catastrophe; why I'm voting to remain - 15th June
 * Ben Wright: Don't look to the breathless (and clueless) markets for Brexit predictions - 14th June
 * Maurice Saatchi: Don't want to Leave but hate the idea of Remain? I have the ideal solution - 14th June
 * Allison Pearson: Not even SamCam can stop women voting for Brexit - There is panic in the Remain camp, and rightly so. Each new tactic comes across as an increasingly desperate Mr Punch beating up Judy and squawking, “Oh, yes, you will!” - 15th June
 * Jane Merrick: Boris Johnson is close to winning the EU referendum, but losing it might be better for his career - 14th June
 * Matthew Shaddick: Britain is betting more on Brexit, but I'm punting on Remain - 14th June
 * Peter Foster: Brexit supporters have very high expectations. This is as much a problem for Boris Johnson as it is for David Cameron - 14th June
 * Asa Bennett: Is Britain ready to risk it with Brexit? Why everyone could be wrong about the EU referendum - Here are six reasons why Remainers shouldn't give up hope of winning - 14th June
 * Tom Harris: Leaked document reveals the secret agent working for Brexit at the heart of Jeremy Corbyn's Labour Party - 14th June
 * Howard Flight: Why we must be set free from the shackles of Europe - 13th June
 * Norman Lamont: Not only can Britain can leave the EU and have access to the single market, we'd actually get a better deal - 13th June
 * Matthew Lynn: Why the euro is a long way from challenging the dollar's dominance - 13th June
 * John McTernan: How Jeremy Corbyn and Labour can still save the Remain campaign - 13th June
 * Norman Tebbit: Even if it has the momentum, Leave needs to up its game - 13th June
 * Ambrose Evans-Pritchard : Brexit vote is about the supremacy of Parliament and nothing else: Why I am voting to leave the EU - 12th June
 * Adam Marshall: In or Out, we need a sharper focus on bolstering business success - 12th June
 * Boris Johnson: When it comes to the single market, you don't have to be in it to win it - 12th June
 * Charles Moore: The UK shows the EU how to be a proper Union -
 * Ambrose Evans-Pritchard : Brexit vote is about the supremacy of Parliament and nothing else: Why I am voting to leave the EU - 12th June
 * Roger Bootle: Italy’s failure to thrive puts the boot into eurozone goal - 13th June
 * Janet Daley: Want to know what real racism is? Ask Donald Trump not Brexiteers - 12th June
 * Christopher Booker: Life in the EU is hardly going to get better. Would we vote to join? - 12th June
 * Simon Heffer: The party leaders are Remain, but their core voters aren’t - 12th June
 * Tom Stevenson: A gilt-edged future hangs on the event of June 23 - 11th June
 * Nigel Farage: Here is what my vision of Britain really looks like - 11th June
 * Allister Heath: Why big business got it wrong over Brexit - The longer this campaign continues, regardless of which side wins, the more it becomes obvious that the City and big business have made a terrible mistake - 11th June
 * Allister Heath: We will still trade freely with the EU if we vote Leave - 10th June
 * Michael Deacon: Michael Gove’s guide to Britain’s greatest enemy... the experts - 10th June
 * Nigel Farage: Don't let David Cameron and George Osborne fool you: here's what my vision of Britain really looks like - 10th June
 * Ben Ainslie: Why throw everything overboard? It isn’t worth the risk - 10th June
 * Charles Moore: David Cameron's beloved single market is a ploy designed to subjugate British rights - 11th June
 * Andrew Sentance: Four reasons a post-Brexit UK can’t copy Norway or Switzerland - 10th June
 * Sophy Ridge: Five female politicians vs one man: Was this the night British politics changed? - 10th June
 * Asa Bennett: Remain tried to strike Boris Johnson down; he is now more powerful than they could possibly imagine - 10th June
 * Simon Tilford: If we leave the EU, other countries will think we're a bunch of spoilt children. They'll be right - 10th June
 * Jon wilson: Total sovereignty is a dangerous myth which has led many British leaders to ruin - 10th June
 * Tim Stanley: Leave won the ITV debate –and Boris Johnson looks like a future Prime Minister -
 * Allister Heath: We will still trade freely with the EU if we vote Leave - 10th June
 * Bernard Connolly: Heavy cost of UK’s access to the single market in Europe - 9th June
 * Judith Woods: My husband put a Remain poster in our sitting room window - but it's not that simple - 9th June
 * Fraser Nelson: Look out Boris Johnson - Downing Street's assassins are out to get you - 9th June
 * Tom Harris: We Brexiteers need to be honest: losing someone as decent as Sarah Wollaston is bad news for us - 10th June
 * Asa Bennett: Brexiteers must convince voters leaving will be worth it, even if it costs them - 9th June
 * John Sentamu: Our commitments to our European partners cannot be lightly cast aside – that's why I’ll be voting to Remain - 8th June
 * Nicholas Stern: UK economy would be seriously weakened by Brexit - 8th June
 * Ambrose Evans-Pritchard: Britain's defiant judges fight back against Europe's imperial court - 8th June
 * Allister Heath: Keep calm and ooze compassion: Leave must seize the moral high ground - 9th June
 * Charles Grant: Why leaving the EU really does mean Brexit - 8th June
 * James Kirkup: For the love of God, let young people register to vote. Can you imagine the whinging if they're stopped? - 8th June
 * Asa Bennett: Europhiles beware, the voters you're relying on are drifting towards Brexit - 8th June
 * Peter Foster: The dream of Europe is slipping from the bureaucrats' grasp. Will they wake up before it's too late? - 8th June
 * Jeremy Warner: Business goes into lockdown mode as profound political change looms - 8th June
 * Ambrose Evans-Pritchard: France shuns Europe as Brexit revolt spreads - 8th June
 * Philip Johnston: A vote for Brexit is now a very real possibility – we must be ready for it - Here is a confident prediction about the outcome of the EU referendum on June 23. The first result, to be declared at around 1am, will be overwhelmingly in favour of staying in. There will be an 85 per cent turnout – and 88 per cent of voters, or thereabouts, will be for Remain - 8th June
 * Tom Harris: David Cameron is getting worried – why else would he be making nasty, personal attacks - 7th June
 * Asa Bennett: Nigel Farage is a bomb who could blow up in the Leave campaign's face - Farage has built up quite a following during his career-long campaign to get Britain out of the European Union. The problem is he has alienated just as many voters along the way - 7th June
 * Patrick Minford: Britain must ditch its protectionist EU trade agreement - It has become a standard nostrum of the Remain side that if we left the EU we would need to negotiate numerous trade agreements to prosper, not least with the EU itself. But the nostrum is just nonsense - 7th June
 * Phoebe Luckhurst: Remain needs to stop patronising young voters with toe-curling slogans - 7th June
 * William Hague: The Leave campaign can’t keep dodging the biggest question - 7th June
 * Sean Howlett: If we Remain, the EU is going to ruin the City - 7th June
 * Asa Bennett: Voters are hearing the risks of remaining in the EU, and are concluding it's time for Brexit - 7th June
 * Polly Neate: Forget house prices. The EU referendum matters for women’s lives - 6th June
 * James Kirkup: David Cameron's deal with Harriet Harman could win the EU referendum – and destroy his leadership - 6th June
 * Jeffrey Sterling: The Europe I backed in 1975 has disappeared - 5th June
 * Boris Johnson: You must Vote to leave the EU or wake up with the worst hangover in history - Now, and now only, was the time to call a halt to the endless erosion of democracy - 5th June
 * Simon Calver: Halt in decision making is crippling business as Brexit referendum looms - 5th June
 * Roger Bootle: Economic arguments about Brexit have succumbed to group-think - I am amazed by the confidence, bordering on arrogance, displayed by these various organisations as to what economists know about the future - 5th June
 * Christopher Booker : EU is paymaster for pro-Remain 'green’ charities - 5th June
 * Janet Daley: Johnson and Gove have an exciting chance to shift the axis of politics - 5th June
 * Allison Pearson: It's not nice being called a racist for raising concerns about immigration - 5th June
 * Simon Heffer: The migration question that can’t be answered - 4th June
 * Allister Heath: Why banks won’t leave if we vote for Brexit - You can cry wolf once, twice or perhaps even three times. At some point, however, your bluff will be called, and everybody will ignore you. That, tragically, is the City’s fate - 4th June
 * Allison Pearson: It's not nice being called a racist for raising concerns about immigration - 3rd June
 * Mark Price: Why our world-beating businesses are better off inside the EU - 3rd June
 * Nus Ghani: Britain's hands are tied by the EU on immigration, so we need Brexit - 3rd June
 * Matthew Shaddick: Why are more people putting money on Brexit? - 3rd June
 * Asa Bennett: Michael Gove won't admit it, but tonight's EU debate is his first audition for the Tory leadership - 3rd June
 * Andrew Large: Brexit: why I changed my mind and became a retainer - 3rd June
 * Philip Davies: Ten years ago I was the first MP to call for Brexit – the arguments have not changed - 2nd June
 * Tim Stanley: Jeremy Corbyn does not trust the British public to make the right decisions - 2nd June
 * Asa Bennett: Jeremy Corbyn would be mad if he thinks he can convince Britain to love immigration - 2nd June
 * David Nussbaum: Leaving the EU would put our environment at risk - 2nd June
 * Juliet Samuel: Australia lets in more migrants than we do – but the point is that they choose to do so - 1st June
 * Ambrose Evans-Pritchard: Leave camp must accept that Norway model is the only safe way to exit EU - The Leave campaign must choose. It cannot safeguard access to the EU single market and offer a plausible arrangement for the British economy, unless it capitulates on the free movement of EU citizens - 2nd June
 * Allister Heath: There is no safety inside the arrogant, imperial, and dangerously unstable EU - We may not always like it, but one of the intractable realities of the human condition is that nothing ever stays the same - 2nd June 2016
 * Rishi Sunnak : One glance at the EU's dismal trade policy simply destroys the economic argument for Remain - 1st June
 * Asa Bennett: Immigration is the Brexiteers' comfort blanket. It isn't enough to win them the EU referendum - 1st June
 * John McTernan: Don't kid yourselves Brexiteers: an Australian points-based system won't solve Britain's immigration dilemma - 1st June
 * Steve Hilton: Leaving the EU means trusting people over distant institutions. That's the conservative way - 31st May
 * Tom Harris: Britain’s immigration debate is not about race – it’s about arithmetic - 31st May
 * Jeremy Warner: Just look at Germany's troubled past to see the damage referendums can do - 1st June
 * Lynton Crosby: Brexit focus on immigration concerns is paying off - but Leave has to keep up the pressure - 30th May
 * William Hague: How is Britain going to knit itself together again after the EU referendum? - 30th May
 * James Kirkup: There may be no good outcome for David Cameron to the EU referendum - 30th May
 * Norman Tebbit: Every day the EU further threatens our sovereignty – and David Cameron cannot stop it - 30th May
 * Boris Johnson: The only continent with weaker economic growth than Europe is Antarctica - Yes indeed, let us talk about economics. Let’s look at the real economic impact of the European Union on Britain and Europe - 29th May
 * Andy Coulson: Steve Hilton's lessons from La-La Land for the Leave campaign - 29th May
 * John McTernan: By calling the EU referendum, David Cameron put himself on a one-way road to his retirement - 29th May
 * Michael Fallon: For security and prosperity, even Eurosceptics have to vote Remain - 28th May
 * Priti Patel: The wealthy leaders of Remain will never know the devastating effect EU immigration has on ordinary people - 28th May
 * Christopher Booker: Vote Leave is handing victory to Project Fear - 28th May
 * David Davis: Britain is not like other countries – even the EU will be forced to treat us fairly - 27th May
 * Charles Moore: The Leave campaign has failed to allay the anxieties of Mr and Mrs Prudence - 27th May
 * Peter Foster: Five reasons why it's still worth a punt on Brexit - They think it’s all over…and to judge by the recent spate of pro-Remain polls on the EU Referendum question, it pretty much is now - 28th May
 * Andrew Sentance: Brexit would slam the brakes on the UK's hugely successful car industry - 27th May
 * Colonel Richard Kemp: It is an EU army that could bring about war - 27th May
 * Asa Bennett: Nigel Farage is gearing up for a bloody Ukip leadership battle if Britain rejects Brexit - 27th May
 * David Green: Don't believe the EU doom-mongers. Brexit can unleash Britain's prosperity - 27th May
 * Peter Lilley: The truth about Britain's trade outside the European Union - 27th May
 * Allister Heath: Crisis-ridden eurozone matters less and less to UK - 26th May
 * Tim Stanley: EU referendum debate: It turns out young people are as terrified as the rest of us - 26th May
 * Matthew Lynn: The EU’s plans to regulate content on streaming services are a mistake - 26th May
 * Fraser Nelson: Europe's voters are getting angry. Leaders should listen to them instead of sneering - 26th May
 * Asa Bennett: Eurosceptics are popular with voters across Europe. That's why Brussels wants to destroy them - 26th May
 * Allister Heath: Brexit will make us richer. That's why Leave could still win - 26th May
 * Andrew Lilico: Why leaving the EU could actually be to our economic advantage - 25th May
 * Asa Bennett: Official: Brexiteers like it quick, but Remainers take their time - 26th May
 * Timothy Cross: Stiffen your sinews and Vote Leave - Brexit will make Britain great again - What has been most striking about the referendum debate is how depressingly short-termist, tactical and negative it has all been - 25th May
 * Timothy Cross: Stiffen your sinews and Vote Leave - Brexit will make Britain great again - What has been most striking about the referendum debate is how depressingly short-termist, tactical and negative it has all been - 25th May
 * Allison Pearson: No wonder women back Brexit - mums know best - 25th May
 * James Kirkup: Despite David Cameron's paranoia, most Tories don't want to go to war over Europe - 24th May
 * Pawel Swidlicki: The far-Right may have lost in Austria, but the march of the populists will continue – and paralyse the EU - 24th May
 * Tom Harris: Any Tory who challenges David Cameron after the referendum is committing political suicide - 24th May
 * Asa Bennett: Brexiteers' lack of a plan is their greatest weakness, and George Osborne is exploiting it mercilessly - George Osborne's campaigning in the EU referendum shouldn't surprise anyone who remembers the tactics he tends to use: his favourite being to define his opponent in the public's mind before they can define themselves - 24th May
 * William Hague: Trade deals are the world's best hope of avoiding the new recession - 23rd May
 * James Kirkup: EU Facts: Would a vote to leave the EU really plunge Britain into a terrifying recession? - Is it really possible for the Treasury to state as facts what would happen to the economy after Brexit? - 23rd May
 * Jeremy Warner: Should the Treasury's warning of a year-long, post-Brexit recession be believed, or is it just nonsense? - 23rd May
 * Matthew Shaddick: When it comes to who's going to win the EU referendum, the best people to ask are the bookies -
 * Asa Bennett: After their general election mess-up, the EU referendum will humble pollsters all over again - 23rd May
 * Roger Bootle: The European Union and the euro: this is a marriage made in hell - 23rd May
 * Peter Foster: Regardless of a Hofer win in Austria, populist parties are changing the European political landscape - 23rd May
 * Boris Johnson: Future Britons will find it hard to believe that anyone voted to stay in the EU - 22nd May
 * James Bartholomew: The EU has destroyed some of our most prosperous industries - and will continue to do so -
 * Simon Heffer: David Cameron's disgraceful dishonesty over the EU is turning Britain into a banana republic - 22nd May 2016
 * Oliver Pritchett: Freddie the Wonder Horse is going for Brexit - 21st May
 * Charles Moore: With its future assured, the BBC is now happy to toe David Cameron's EU line - 21st May
 * Allison Pearson: Cumberbatch's artistic spirit should be rebelling against EU bureaucracy - 21st May
 * Rupert Myers: The Brexiteers are having so much fun that sometimes I wish I could join them - 20th May
 * Roland Smith: Leaving the EU will change almost nothing – to start with - 20th May
 * Asa Bennett: Voters don't care about TTIP, so how will it help Brexiteers win the EU referendum? - 20th May
 * Rupert Christiansen: Brexit will boost our creativity — whatever Keira Knightley and the rest of the luvvies might say - 20th May
 * Tom Harris: Labour's lazy Europhilia shows it has given up on winning elections - 19th May
 * Asa Bennett: Has David Cameron coaxed out Britain's shy Tory Europhiles? - 19th May
 * Allister Heath: Economists have a century of failure behind them. No wonder they back Remain now - 18th May
 * Rem Korteweg: No, TTIP is not a good reason for Britain to leave the European Union - 18th May
 * Jessica Brown: Why David Cameron may have already blown the EU referendum - 18th May
 * Jeremy Warner: Europe’s capital markets union is lost without Britain's constraining, liberal influence - 18th May
 * Con Coughlin: Can we trust the EU to safeguard our security? - 18th May
 * John Longworth: Undecided on the EU referendum? Here is a simple solution - 17th May
 * Tom Harris: The sinister John McDonnell is trying to sink the Remain campaign – good luck to him - 17th May
 * Peter Bone MEP: A vote for Remain is a vote for mass immigration from Turkey - This referendum is a once in a generation chance for us to take back control of our country - 17th May
 * Asa Bennett: Voters need to know: how final is the EU referendum? - 17th May
 * Allister Heath: The City will regret falling out with its real friends over Brexit - 17th May
 * Toby Young: The BBC's focus on immigration was a whole day of anti-Brexit propaganda - 17th May
 * William Hague: The Leave campaign is really the Donald Trump campaign with better hair - 17th May
 * Jeremy Warner: Why I would be celebrating if Brexit led to lower house prices - 16th May
 * Simon Fraser: Leaving the EU means retreating from the real world into a self-absorbed fantasy - 16th May
 * Norman Tebbit: It's time for Britain to get off its knees – freedom awaits us outside the EU - Our record of successful self government, democracy and the rule of law is far, far superior to that of the other Member states of the EU. Time and time again, we have rescued the people of the continent from the follies of their leaders. They have never rescued us - 16th May
 * Roger Carr: Remain in EU to fortify defence and protect peace - 16th May
 * Boris Johnson: Of course our City fat cats love the EU – it’s why they earn so much - At last year’s Tory Party conference I drew attention to a worrying statistic about the way our society is changing. It is the number of times the salary of the average FTSE100 top executive exceeds that of the average – the average – employee in that company - 16th May
 * Roger Carr: Remain in EU to fortify defence and protect peace - 15th May
 * Boris Johnson: The EU wants a superstate, just as Hitler did - 15th May
 * Simon Heffer: The Fourth Reich is here - without a shot being fired - 15th May
 * Simon Heffer: Vote Leave have shot themselves in the foot by pushing Nigel Farage away - 14th May
 * Tim Stanley: The EU referendum is a class war - 14th May
 * Charles Moore: Of course Mark Carney backs Remain – the EU will always benefit people like him - 13th May
 * Tim Stanley: The graph that shows immigration could decide the EU referendum - The Remain camp continues to wheel out economic disasters to warn against economic disaster - 13th May
 * Kate Hoey: Brexit won't hurt Northern Ireland at all – instead, it will brighten its future - A striking feature of the Brexit debate is the lack of a core belief in the EU from the Remain campaign - 13th May
 * John Major and the Remain camp are desperate to stop people talking about immigration - 13th May
 * Tom Harris: John Major and the Remain camp are desperate to stop people talking about immigration - 13th May
 * Asa Bennett: Referendum? What referendum? Lots of people have no idea what politicians actually think about Brexit - Politicians might hope voters have a pretty good idea what they think about Brexit by now, but recent polling by Opinium found that many are not so sure - 13th May
 * Howard Shaw: The EU is holding our economy back – and Brexit could set it free - 13th May
 * John McTernan: Yes, the ITV debate is a stitch-up. But Vote Leave should stop whining about it - 12th May
 * Jeremy Warner: From Trump to Brexit, here are six previously impossible things for our besieged world economy - 12th May
 * Allister Heath: Remainers are moving heaven and earth – but not the polls - 12th May
 * Julian Thompson: The Falklands would be safer after Brexit - As the EU referendum campaign enters its final stages, the Remain camp is resorting to ever more desperate fear tactics to win the argument - 11th May
 * James Kirkup: Boris Johnson vs John Humphrys: who won the battle over Brexit? - oris Johnson, the leading Brexit campaigner, has clashed with John Humphrys, the veteran BBC interviewer, in a combative exchange on Radio Four’s Today Programme - 11th May
 * Asa Bennett: Gordon Brown's new mission is to save David Cameron and the pro-EU campaign - 11th May
 * Peter Foster: Why the evil genius of David Cameron’s EU referendum gambit may yet prove his undoing - 11th May
 * Charlie Brooks: I think we're having the wool pulled over our eyes about the EU – do you agree? - 10th May
 * Tim Bale: David Cameron is not the man to shoot the Conservative Eurosceptic dog - 10th May
 * Angela Epstein: Why Europe-wide anti-Semitism is driving my vote for Brexit - 10th May
 * Alan Sked: Nation states have been the making of Europe - Brexit will mean the return of normal self-government to Britain – and it is normal in the modern world for nations to run their own affairs - 9th May
 * William Hague: Leaving the EU would be disastrous for the Falklands, Gibraltar and Ulster - 9th May
 * Richard Kemp: It is an EU army that could bring about war - avid Cameron says Brexit could lead to continental war - 9th May
 * James Holland: Peace would be fragile and war more likely if Britain left Europe - 9th May
 * Nigel Jones: The EU does not preserve peace in Europe – instead it has brought us closer to war - George Orwell and Joseph Goebbels did not have much in common, but they both understood the essence of propaganda - 9th May
 * James Kirkup: Even David Cameron doesn't believe David Cameron's threat that leaving the EU would mean war - 9th May
 * Asa Bennett: David Cameron's warning that Brexit could plunge us into war is all about one thing: turnout - 9th May
 * Julian Lewis: Far from keeping Britain safe, the European Union is a threat to peace - 8th May
 * Christopher Booker: Farmers fall victim to the maddest EU subsidy shambles of them all - 7th May
 * Gerard Lyons: The City of London cares more about its global rivals than the threat of Brexit - London will remain Europe’s leading financial centre whether we remain in the European Union, or leave. This does not mean the referendum outcome will not affect the City. It will - 6th May
 * Jeremy Warner: Is losing the City of London really a price worth paying for Brexit? - Without wishing to be rude, is this the best Vote Leave can muster? I’m not talking about the wider Brexit debate, but the specific issue of the future of Britain’s biggest industry - finance - 5th May
 * Ambrose Evans-Pritchard: Let the TTIP trade pact die if it threatens Parliamentary democracy - Unloved, untimely, and unnecessary, the putative free trade pact between Europe and America is dying a slow death - 4th May
 * Nigel Lawson: The EU exists only to become a superstate. Britain has no place in it - For Britain, the issue in the coming European referendum is not Europe, with its great history, incomparable culture, and diverse peoples, but the European Union - 3rd May
 * James Kirkup: ''The EU referendum has started a fire in the Conservative Party that is now burning out of control - What matters more to the typical voter, British sovereignty in the European Union, or the quality of their children’s education? - 2nd May
 * Charles Moore: The EU’s defenders are clinging to something that is weakening - 2nd May
 * Christopher Booker: Brexiteers! We need an exit strategy and we need it now! - 1st May
 * Janet Daley: Federal government in the US and EU is pushing politics to the brink - ou don’t hear the totemic vision of a “United States of Europe” being touted much at the moment. I wonder why - 1st May
 * Michael Deacon: Britain is a nation of pedantic busybodies... so how can we complain about EU red tape? - 30 April
 * Simon Tilford: Brexit would be a victory for xenophobes -
 * Rupert Myers: Brexiteers must stop whining and realise David Cameron is playing to win - Brexiteers must stop whining and realise David Cameron is playing to win - 29th April
 * Liam Halligan: Everyone’s lining up against Brexit, but voters aren’t fooled - With Britain’s EU decision-day less than two months away, every official economic body now seems to be telling us Brexit would send the British economy to hell in a hand-basket – and even threat of Brexit is already doing untold damage - 1st May
 * Allister Heath: EU red tape is suffocating UK economy and Brexit can set us free - For those business people who believe both in remaining in the EU and in free markets, these are difficult times - 30th April
 * Michael Petley: The EU merry-go-round is broken. Time to get off - 29th April
 * Alex Taylor: I'm appalled that expats like me can't vote in the EU referendum - 28th April
 * Peter Foster: We are all farcically in the dark about what would happen after a vote for Brexit - 28thApril
 * David Martin Jones & M L R Smith, king's college london: Brexit and the myth of European security: Would the UK leaving the EU really undermine Western safety? - 28th April
 * Allister Heath: Only Brexit can force the Tories to abandon fear and win young hearts - 27th April
 * Andrew Lilico: If George Osborne really thinks the EU referendum is so bad for the economy, why is he holding it? - 27th April
 * Mile Galsworthy: British scientists have spoken, and they want to stay in the EU - 27th April
 * Philip Johnston: Expats could very well swing the referendum - 27th April
 * Allison Pearson: The Brexit row is pulling friendships and families apart - 26th April
 * John McTernan: Don't kid yourselves Brexiteers: an Australian points-based system won't solve Britain's immigration dilemma'' - 26th April
 * Michael Ancram: After 40 years of being lied to, it's time to leave the EU - 25th April
 * Hugo Dixon: Michael Gove’s Brexit blackmail would fail - as soon as we left, the EU would unite against Britain - 25th April
 * Tom Harris: The Government must tell the truth about our open borders - 25th April
 * Asa Bennett: Theresa May wants you to stay in the EU. Has she blown her chances of ever being Tory leader? - 25th April
 * Boris Johnson: Do Bremainers really think voters will be cowed by the likes of Obama? - So I gather they think it’s game over. The Bremainers think they have bombed us into submission - 25th April
 * Charles Moore: Trade deals are red herrings in the EU debate - In this EU referendum campaign, the odd idea has spread that a trade deal matters above everything - 24th April
 * Christopher Booker: What Nick Robinson and the BBC left out in its biased history of EU - 24th April
 * Janet Daley: Why should we take advice from a president who has surrendered the world to chaos? - I wonder who in Downing Street briefed Barack Obama’s team on the wording of his friendly warning to the British - 24th April
 * Liam Fox: Why Britain cannot afford to be conned by Cameron's EU 'renegotiation' deal - 23rd April
 * Penny Mordaunt: President Obama is wrong about the EU and what Brexit will mean for our national security - 23rd April
 * Liam Halligan: A pro-EU 'study' straight from the Ministry of Truth - 23rd April
 * Barack Obama: As your friend, let me tell you that the EU makes Britain even greater - 23rd April
 * Jeremy Warner: This darned Brexit vote seems to be fouling up everything - 23rd April
 * Charles Moore: Mr Obama's catchphrase is 'Yes, you can!' - so why is he telling us Brits 'No, you can't'? - 22nd April
 * Simon Heffer: Cameron's dirty tactics in the EU referendum are digging his political grave - 24th April
 * Tim Stanley: Barack Obama, our fair-weather friend, is wrong about the EU - 22nd April
 * Leo McKinstry: The Remain camp would rather live in a world where the public has no voice - 21st April
 * Peter Foster: Don't bank on Britain listening to Obama over Brexit - 21st April
 * Allister Heath: We’re so used to EU rule that we’ve forgotten how to do it for ourselves - Many Remain intellectuals genuinely view the EU as a great safety net, an irreplaceable device that prevents economic disintegration - 21st April
 * Jeremy Warner: Michael Gove is wrong: cool-headed evaluation of Brexit risks is not unpatriotic - As was always inevitable, the EU referendum is shaping up to be a straight fight between the alleged economic costs of leaving and the politics of immigration; and as was always equally inevitable, it is the perceived threat to people’s pockets which is winning the argument - 20th April
 * Philip Johnston: The Conservative Party may be destroyed by this European madness - You do wonder whether the Conservative Party appreciates how bad its in-fighting over the EU looks to the country at large, and how deeply it worries the voters who put them into power last May - 20th April 2016
 * William Hague: Barack Obama is entitled to tell us what America thinks about Brexit - 18th April
 * Allister Heath: The Treasury's 'dodgy dossier' on Brexit is beneath contempt - 18th April
 * Asa Bennett: George Osborne nails his colours to the EU mast. Has he given up hope of ever being Tory leader? - 18th April
 * Norman Tebbit: The Government is doing everything in its power to rig the EU Referendum - Spare us another couple of months of hair-raising panic attacks by Remainers like Stephen Crabb for whom the days when the British people used to make their own laws and elect their own governments where back in the dark ages, indeed before he had even started school - 19th April
 * Charles Moore: The EU oligarchs will despise us even more if we Leave. That's reason enough - 18th April
 * Boris Johnson: Angela Merkel is now silencing German satirists to please Erdogan. This is what the EU has wrought - 18th April
 * Christopher Booker: Why global governance is making the EU irrelevant - Scarcely a sentence in that creepy Government leaflet telling us to vote to stay in the EU does not cry out for factual correction - 17th April
 * Janet Daley: The half-witted Remain camp have squandered their early advantage - No EU referendum story has offered quite so much pleasure as this one, which I trust will provide you with the same 10 minutes of helpless hilarity that it gave me - 17th April
 * Hugo Dixon: Voting to Leave means voting for chaos and less control - 16th April
 * Tim Stanley: The EU referendum is becoming a contest between the Establishment and the people - 15th April
 * Asa Bennett: Fear is David Cameron's ally in the EU referendum – and it's working - 15th April
 * John McTernan: It's up to Jeremy Corbyn to stop Brexit. Here's what he needs to do - there is one astounding fact about the referendum campaign: voters have no idea that Labour support staying in the European Union - 14th April
 * James Kirkup: Only one man can save David Cameron's legacy. Unfortunately for the PM, that man is Jeremy Corbyn - 15th April
 * Asa Bennett: Is Ukip just Nigel Farage's ego trip? The EU referendum will tell us once and for all -
 * Paul Nuttall: Jeremy Corbyn has sold out and joined the Europhile elite - 14th April
 * Asa Bennett: Is Ukip just Nigel Farage's ego trip? The EU referendum will tell us once and for all - 14th April
 * Juliet Samuel: We can thrive outside the EU, but we must not succumb to a fantasy - 13th April
 * Asa Bennett: Brexiteers remain painfully divided, no matter who leads them - 13th April
 * Asa Bennett: David Cameron, the pro-EU side's best weapon, has been tarnished - 13th April
 * Jayne Anne Gadhia: Why we are better off together with Europe than being outsiders - 11th April
 * Roger Bootle: Staying in the EU is a leap in the dark with both legs shackled - One of the most potent arguments for staying in the EU is the uncertainty that would supposedly be unleashed by a departure - 11th April
 * David Blair: Bash Brussels if you must, but remember those who died under the EU’s flag in Kiev - 10th April
 * Christopher Booker: Brexiteers are spurning their only chance of victory - 9th April
 * Daniel Hannan: Not even David Cameron's £9.3 million on a leaflet will sell an idea whose time has passed - 8th April
 * Tim Stanley: Whatever is bad for David Cameron is good for Brexit - 8th April
 * Bruce Clark: Why Ireland is gritting its teeth for Brexit - 7th April
 * Michael Petrou: I'm sorry, Britain, but you're just too puny to prosper outside the EU - I once took great pleasure in antagonising your Europhiliac citizens by pointing out the ridiculousness of the whole European Union project - 7th April
 * Leo McKinstry: The EU has revealed its true nature: a federalist monster that will not stop until nations are abolished - 7th April
 * Tim Knox: Our border with the EU is collapsing at the worst possible time - 7th April
 * Richard Walton: The EU's frontier failings are the stuff of a counter-terror chief's nightmares - The EU’s admission this week that it cannot control its “outer borders” will send a shiver down the spines of police and intelligence chiefs across Europe - 6th April
 * Stephen Weatherill: No, leaving the EU won't ruin the Premier League - glance at any game played in the English Premier League immediately reveals its international nature. English players are firmly in the minority - 6th April
 * Tom Harris: David Cameron must be terrified that Project Fear will backfire - So, negative campaigning works. Who knew?- 5th April
 * Alan Wheatley: What has the EU ever done for us? - Monty Python got the debate on Brexit right in Life of Brian - 5th April
 * David Cameron: Britain's choice: economic security with the EU, or a leap into the dark - Imagine a world where a British airline wasn’t allowed to fly between Rome and Paris - 5th April
 * Juliet Samuel: Project Fear has gone too far – Leaving the EU won't make Britain less healthy - Steel crisis: protectionism sounds nice but will cost jobs in the long run''] - 4th April
 * Pinchas Goldschmidt: ''There's no time for debate: the EU must become a federal superstate right now - 4th April
 * Norman Tebbit: Project Fear has gone too far – Leaving the EU won't make Britain less healthy - 4th April
 * Boris Johnson: Pity the Port Talbot workers – their country is powerless to help them - Everyone feels sorry for the 15,000 steelworkers at Port Talbot; everyone in this country will be hoping for a solution that will keep them in work. That is partly because their fate seems so unjust. This disaster isn’t their fault - 4th April
 * Simon Heffer: It’s a lie to suggest that Brexit would ruin us - 3rd April
 * Miriam Gonzalez: It’s just wrong to blame the EU for terrorism - Flawed political decisions, rather than the failings of Brussels, have allowed an evil ideology to flourish - 31st March
 * Jeremy Warner: Immigration is what will decide the outcome of the referendum, as it will in Holland too - Barely noticed amid the obsession with our own vote on membership of the European Union, there is “another” referendum taking place in Europe next week which reflects on many of the same concerns - 30th March
 * Philip Johnston: The EU referendum must be decided by more than 55 per cent of voters - The arguments for and against remaining in the EU need to move out of factional party politics - 30th March
 * Abi Wilkinson: Stubborn old people who want to leave the EU are condemning the rest to a lifetime of uncertainty - In the EU referendum it’s older folk who will be playing fast and loose with the livelihoods of younger generations - 29th March
 * Keir Starmer QC: Leaving the EU would be a retrograde step for national security - As in business, so in criminal justice and security, the best results are achieved building on what works - 30th March
 * Greg Rosen MP: No, Britain wasn't lied to when we joined the EU. We knew what we were getting into - Those who claim we were deceived when we entered Europe in 1975 are speaking in flagrant ignorance of the easily-accessible facts - 29th March
 * Mark Brolin: When Europhiles start parading their 'experts' you know they've lost the argument - Don't listen to the very clever people who tell you Brexit will be a disaster – it's pure emotional manipulation from a duff campaign - 28th March
 * Anna Soubry MP: The EU referendum is a choice between certainty and risk - With our children and grandchildren’s future at stake, Brexit is a gamble we cannot take - 28th March
 * Christopher Booker: EU referendum: Fluff and nonsense from both 'Remain’ and 'Leave’ - There has been far too much vacuous nonsense from both sides of the campaign that has made real debate impossible - 27th March
 * Charles Moore: The EU is a huge version of Belgium – and it can’t deal with the modern world - Europe lacks the will and capacity for self-defence against the kind of attacks we witnessed this week - 26th March
 * Con Coughlin: Belgian security is so bad it's actually a threat to Britain - The Brussels attacks have revealed the staggering incompetence of European intelligence. How can anyone say we're safer in the EU? - 25th March
 * Fraser Nelson: When will Cameron realise he can’t win the EU referendum by scaring us? - Even in the face of the Brussels attacks, the PM should drop Project Fear and promise to unveil his new Bill of Rights after June - 25th March
 * Alan Duncan: Why this lifelong Eurosceptic is now voting to stay in - Conservatives must be realists and deal with the world as we find it – not fall for promises of the utopia which supposedly awaits us outside the EU - 23rd March
 * Asa Bennett: Is Jeremy Corbyn secretly trying to turn his supporters against the EU? - Young Europhiles need to be inspired by the Labour leader to turn out, but he doesn't seem to care much about doing it - 23rd March
 * Con Coughlin: Britain is not taking the fight to the terrorists - David Cameron’s focus on the EU referendum means the UK is not asserting its power and influence in the world - 22nd March
 * Allison Pearson: Why stay in the EU when its capital is also the capital of jihadism in Europe? - Thanks to open borders within the EU, and a fatally lax approach to vetting refugees, the lives of millions of Europeans have been put at risk - 23rd March
 * Philip Johnston: The EU aspires to be a state but fails to deal with the enemy within - Terrorist attacks in Brussels will raise more questions about how we respond to extremism - 23rd March
 * Peter Foster: Brussels attacks: Terrorism could break the EU and lead to Brexit - Another shocking security lapse in Brussels makes the arguments for European unity and ideals harder to defend - 22nd March
 * John McTernan: Jeremy Corbyn is accidentally punching the Remain campaign on its weakest spot - David Cameron and George Osborne's authority is the cornerstone of the campaign to stay in Europe. The Tory crisis is questioning it - 22nd March
 * Andy Coulson: The one positive for Cameron: IDS has set back the Brexit cause - There is genuine and growing dissent at Tory grassroots level, and MPs will need to keep their seats - 22nd March
 * John Redwood: A Brexit Budget will make us all better off - The Government would have an extra £10 billion to spend on public services or cut hated taxes with - 22nd March
 * Louise Bours: Britain's NHS can't survive staying in the European Union - Do you prefer the EU or the NHS? The referendum gives us a chance to keep our national health service alive, safe from open door immigration and TTIP - 21st March
 * James Kirkup: The IDS explosion could do untold damage to David Cameron’s reputation - The welfare secretary’s actions will wreck the PM’s social reform agenda and retoxify the Tory brand - 20th March
 * Christopher Booker: Amateurs are handing victory to the Remain camp - The Leave camp have failed utterly to agree on a plausible, properly worked-out exit plan - 20th March
 * Michael Gove: A united Tory party will make Britain better - This country has been changed for the better in the last six years and two of the people who've made the biggest difference for good are Iain Duncan Smith and George Osborne - 20th March
 * Janet Daley: Moral missions make no sense to those who treat politics as a branch of PR - Osborne’s clash with IDS highlights a division in the Tory party between those playing a tactical game and others driven by principle - 20th March
 * John Major: Voting to leave will poison Europe and divide West - When we joined the EU we were the "sick man" of Europe: today, we have the best performing economy - 19th March
 * Tim Stanley: Iain Duncan Smith v George Osborne is conservatism of the heart v conservatism of the head - There are now two conservatisms: one that seeks to help people and one that seeks to help people to help themselves. And the debate bleeds into the EU referendum - 19th March
 * John McTernan: The Turkey deal reveals the EU's future - Britain should be desperate to be a part of it - The European Union that we stay in needs to be one of ambition and achievement - 18th March
 * Peter Bone MEP: Dear President Obama, please stay out of the EU referendum - The American President might believe he should speak to us about Europe as we make up our minds, but he can't speak for us - 18th March
 * Yojana Sharma: Leaving the EU would risk Britain's status as a science superpower - The UK gets more out than it pays in for science and research - Brexit would mean being easily overtaken by the likes of Germany - 17th March
 * Camilla Hodgson: Brexiteers can't ignore Europe just to please themselves - Leave campaigners peddle the idea that Britain can leave the EU and abandon all its problems, but the future is increasingly international - 17th March
 * Asa Bennett: EU Facts: Did the OBR really warn against Brexit? - George Osborne brandished the budgetary watchdog's assessment during his Budget that EU exit would cause "uncertainty", but is that all it said? - 17th March
 * David Owen: The EU deal with Turkey is fraught with dangers - It is the most pressing geopolitical issue facing Britain today, so if I were advising the PM I would tell him to let the deal die - 16th March
 * Janet Daley: George Osborne's Budget was about two things: his career and the EU - The Chancellor wants Britain to know: stick with me, stick with Europe, you won't go far wrong - 17th March
 * Philip Johnston: Will George Osborne dare make the Budget a part of Project Fear? - As the Chancellor fights for his future, he will imply that the UK couldn’t cope with the shock of Brexit - 16th March
 * Asa Bennett: Ensuring expats vote in the EU referendum could guarantee Brexit - Delaying the referendum so two million extra expats can vote could swing the result in a way Prime Minister David Cameron won't like - 15th March
 * Hugo Dixon: Obama shouldn't be barracked into silence about the EU - The US President shouldn't tell Britons how to vote, but here's what he should say instead - 15th March
 * Allister Heath: Expect an anti-Brexit Budget that achieves little - 14th March
 * John Bolton: Ignore Obama, Brexit will make the Special Relationship even more special - Contrary to conventional wisdom, Britain’s exit from the floundering EU would immediately create the potential for more effective Western security - 14th March
 * Jeremy Warner: Brexit is hanging like a cloud over the Budget - 14th March
 * David Hannay: Brexiteers have a fuzzy, inaccurate and worrying view of life after Brexit - Vote Leave's odd blueprints for Britain outside of the EU are flawed and would hamper British interests in the world - 14th March
 * Tamara Chabe: Brexit will allow Britain to embrace the Commonwealth - The EU referendum gives Britain a chance to become internationalist and a self-governing trading nation by voting to leave - 14th March
 * Mark Littlewood: I used to love the EU. Now I want Britain to Leave - I tried to beat the Eurosceptics who wanted Britain to leave the EU, but now I'm joining them - 14th March
 * Boris Johnson: Americans would never accept EU restrictions – so why should we? - Barack Obama's plan to urge voters to remain in the European Union is a 'piece of outrageous and exorbitant hypocrisy' - 14th March
 * Charles Moore: All politicians enjoy sharing royal confidences - You would expect the Sovereign to have doubts about a system which undermines her sovereignty... The Remain campaign has not got its line straight about what the Queen supposedly said about Brexit - 14th March
 * Ambrose Evans-Pritchard: Whole of Europe risks spinning into crisis if leaders mishandle Brexit - 13th March
 * Simon Heffer: The EU cheerleaders are starting to panic - If the case to stay in is so compelling, why do Cameron and friends find it impossible to make it? - 13th March
 * Asa Bennett: Backing Brexit could make Zac Goldsmith London Mayor - London is supposed to be a Europhile city, but the Conservative Mayoral contender's EU stance could help him tap into the Eurosceptic outer London - 11th March
 * Fraser Nelson: Celebs - or even the Queen - don't win votes. Arguments do - Politicians are obsessed with signing up famous people to back their causes, but there's no evidence they matter - 11th March
 * Rupert Myers: Eurosceptics can't win with negativity and empty rhetoric - Brexiters won't reveal what life will be like if Britons vote to leave in the EU referendum as they're clearly bluffing. How can voters take them seriously? - 10th March
 * Allister Heath: How a Brexit could save Europe from itself - It is those who love Europe, its diversity, its history and its humanity who should be the most enthusiastic about Brexit - 10th March
 * Charles Crawford: Vladimir Putin wants Britain to vote for Brexit, but that doesn't mean we shouldn't - The Russian President will enjoy Brexit, but staying on the Titanic that is the European Union would delight him even more - 10th March
 * Jacob Rees-Mogg: Mark Carney has debased himself by wading into the EU referendum - If the Bank of England Governor wanted to express political opinions about issues like the European Union, he should have stood for office - 10th March
 * Nigel Jones: David Cameron is misusing the sacrifice of Britain's war dead to advance his pro-EU agenda - Young men did not die in battle so the EU elite could misuse their sacrifice for their own tawdry and dishonest political purposes - 9th March
 * Lucy Denyer: I'm a woman. Don't insult my intelligence by claiming the EU referendum is about tampons - Contrary to the patronising arguments of both the Leave and Remain campaigns, female voters care about trade and sovereignty and security, not pink fluffy things - 9th March
 * James Kirkup: Turkish refugee deal is just another reminder that the EU means immigration - If Britons vote to remain in the EU at the referendum, they will be endorsing free movement - 8th March
 * Asa Bennett: Blokey Eurosceptics must woo women if they want to leave the EU - Women aren't as engaged by the EU referendum as men, so Brexiters must offer a better range of advocates and more than wonky gripes to enthuse them - 8th March
 * Peter Foster: Brexit is truly the gamble of the century - Come EU referendum day, voters will have to decide whether to play it safe or whether they're feeling lucky - 8th March
 * Allister Heath: The fate of John Longworth shows business still doesn't get politics - There are issues that divide a country so deeply that the best outcome is for large, stock market-listed businesses and industry groups to take no side, while allowing individual employees to speak out as they wish - 8th March
 * William Hague: Will Turkey's EU relationship be a model for sceptical Britain? - Turkey and the EU need each other but don't like each other. Sound familiar? A new, looser kind of EU membership is needed - 8th March
 * Hugo Dixon: 'Boris is wrong - Britain will be protected from the maw of a EU superstate'' - The Mayor points to the Five Presidents' Report while making claims about Europe - but he has misunderstood it - 8th March
 * Asa Bennett: The EU's embrace of Turkey could drive Britain out - Britons are already uneasy about Turkey joining the European Union, and its potential fast-tracking into the bloc could antagonise them further - 8th March
 * Norman Tebitt: However distasteful he finds us, David Cameron must hide his contempt for Eurosceptics - The Conservative Party has enough problems without the leader starting a war with his activists - 8th March
 * Boris Johnson: There is no conspiracy. The EU is completely open about its superstate plan - The European bureaucracy is gathering every last bit of power that it can get its hands on, and it's dragging Britain with it - 7th March
 * Charles Moore: The red herring that was the Sovereignty Bill - It's lucky the Government isn't bothering to appease Michael Gove and Boris Johnson anymore, given its efforts were pure nonsense - 7th March
 * Roger Bootle: Exactly why is big business so in favour of the EU? - For many of the key magnitudes that should feature in any assessment of the likely gains and losses from Brexit, it is impossible to come up with hard and fast numbers - 7th March
 * Chris Cummings: Why Brexit risks weakening all our financial services - June 23 will be a pivotal day in modern British history - 7th March
 * Christopher Booker: Why EU 'outers’ are giving Cameron an open goal - If anything is likely to ensure that Britain votes to Remain, it is the way the Leave campaigners are all over the shop - 6th March
 * Janet Daley: Why am I considered a bigot or an idiot for wanting Britain the leave the EU? - The foreign politicians and establishment figures who support Remain forget that the British electorate always stands up to bullies - 6th March
 * Tim Stanley: EU referendum: back Brexit and the establishment will come down on you like a ton of bricks - The apparent punishment of John Longworth for voicing tepid support for Leave is indicative of Remain camp tactics - 5th March
 * Charles Moore: Our pompous, bigoted elite have not even bothered to consider the case for Brexit - Beware the 'swivel-eyed’ moderates who refuse to see the way the world is going nor admit how they have failed - 5th March
 * Jeremy Warner: Brexit is hanging like a cloud over the Budget - his wretched Brexit vote is getting in the way of just about everything - 5th March
 * John McTernan: Stop whining, Iain Duncan Smith. This is politics - The Eurosceptic minister has complained of 'bullying' from the pro-EU campaign. But David Cameron is right to take no prisoners - 4th March
 * Daniel Hannan: In favour of Brexit: Daniel Hannan on why he should be sacked as an MEP - Unsure of which way to jump in the EU referendum? One of Britain's leading Tory Eurosceptics argues the case for voting Leave - 4th March
 * Jeremy Warner: It’s true, the City will suffer if Britain votes to leave the EU - Countries that reject the EU’s obligations are denied access to its single market - particularly in banking - 3rd March
 * Greg Rosen: A British free-trade deal outside the EU? History shows that’s easier said than done - Why look in the crystal ball when we can read the book? History shows what might happen after Brexit - 3rd March
 * Alan Sked: Don’t listen to the EU’s panicking per academics - British professors claim Brexit would cut them off from crucial funding - but this is nonsense which demeans their academic positions - 3rd March
 * Julia Hartley-Brewer: France is trying to blackmail Britain to stay in the EU - Ignore the warning from Emmanuel Macron about the border coming back to Calais. The French would never deliver on such a silly threat – 3rd March
 * Allister Heath:The EU Inners will regret turning Project Fear into Project White Flag - By depicting the UK Government as powerless, they are encouraging a challenge to its authority - 3rd March
 * Richard Rose: David Cameron's EU deal has convinced basically nobody - What the Prime Minister hailed as a major reform in Britain’s relations with Brussels simply gave a marginal boost to those undecided about their referendum voting intention - 3rd March
 * John Springford: The idea of buccaneer Britain trading freely outside the EU is a fantasy - We will always want to trade with Europe, because it's rich and close. The only question is the terms on which we will do so – 2nd March
 * Ben Kelly: Leaving the EU won't actually change Britain much - at first, anyway - For all the dire warnings, Brexit would be a slow, gradual process that minimises turmoil but eventually offers us new opportunities as a nation – 2nd March
 * EU referendum: Former Tory chancellor Lord Lamont backs Brexit - Writing in the Telegraph, the former chancellor says that Britain must “take control” of immigration and that quitting the EU is a “once in a generation opportunity” - 2nd March
 * Philip Johnston: David Cameron may win this referendum, but at the cost of a divided nation - If the four countries of our kingdom vote for different outcomes, the acrimony might break up the Union - 2nd March
 * John Denham: The EU referendum is leaving English voters behind - The Remain side needs an English-specific campaign to go with its Scottish and Welsh ones – or cede the ground to Leave - 2nd March
 * Con Coughlin: The key to solving Europe's refugee crisis lies in Syria, not Brussels - The ceasefire agreed by Russia and the US could ultimately lead to the end of hostilities, allowing refugees to return home - 2nd March
 * Allison Pearson: Our schools and hospitals simply cannot cope with the influx of migrants - that's why we must leave the EU - With maternity units in meltdown and 90,000 children set to lose out on their first choice of school, it's clear that the risk to our families and communities will rise if we vote to stay in Europe - 2nd March
 * Alan Cochrane: Pro-EU campaign should be wary of Nicola Sturgeon - The First Minister's speech in London included a barefaced and quite incredible assault on her new allies about their behaviour in the Scottish independence referendum - 1st March
 * Julia Hartley-Brewer: Jeremy Corbyn should be campaigning for Brexit – but he just doesn't care - The EU referendum is the burning issue of the day, and it's obvious the Labour leader's heart just isn't in it - 1st March
 * William Hague: What are the chances of a better EU deal after voting Out? Zero - Member states simply do not have the collective will or cohesion to agree on an improved offer to Britain - 1st March
 * Kate Hoey: The Civil Service shouldn’t be on Remain’s side - Voters need impartial information – Whitehall must serve them, not one man’s political agenda - 29th February
 * Nigel Jones: We cannot trust the Europhile elite to hold a fair referendum - Even Hitler held referendums – although only ones he was sure he would win. Is the EU referendum heading the same way? - 29th March
 * Asa Bennett: If Peter Mandelson wants to keep Britain in the EU, he should stick to the shadows - The former trade commissioner has waded into the EU referendum campaign to slag off Brexit campaigners, but few voters stand to be swayed by him - 1st March
 * Patrick Minford: Brexit scares over jobs and investment are simple fallacies - Under the rules of British democracy, the citizenry are always able to eject the Government through a general election. That can never happen with those governing the EU - 1st March
 * Rupert Myers: How do Brexiteers justify the claim that the EU will give us a good deal when we leave? - 29th February
 * Roger Bootle: Euro-twaddle or Tolstoy? You choose your poisson... - Last week, Michael Gove’s wife, the journalist, Sarah Vine, divulged what the Justice Secretary was reading while agonising over the coming referendum - 29 February
 * Boris Johnson: Don't be taken in by Project Fear – staying in the European Union is the risky choice - The Remain campaign, including HM Treasury, is actively talking down Britain’s prospects - 29th February
 * Charlotte Leslie MP: In or Out of the EU? I’m proud that I don’t know yet - On such a big and complex question, be wary of those who claim certainty about the best way to vote in the referendum - 28th February
 * Charles Moore: Don’t bother God with the EU referendum - The Almighty endowed us with minds so that we could choose freely. The truth is that there are respectable Christian arguments on both sides - 28th February
 * Janet Daley: All this sound and fury over Europe will do nothing to sway rational voters - Westminster theatrics should play no part in the referendum on the most important question we have faced in a generation - 28th February
 * Liam Halligan: Power-hungry EU is doomed to pursue its anti-democratic path - 28th February
 * Christopher Booker: Nine deceptions in our history with the EU - The strange pseudo-deal stitched up between David Cameron and his 27 EU colleagues is yet another example of the EU's smoke and mirrors - 28th February
 * Simon Heffer: Shame on the academic EU scaremongers - Brainwashing has already started at our universities. The pro-EU forces will stop at nothing - 28th February
 * Roger Bootle: Euro-twaddle or Tolstoy? You choose your poison... - Last week, Michael Gove’s wife, the journalist, Sarah Vine, divulged what the Justice Secretary was reading while agonising over the coming referendum - 28th February
 * Charles Moore: Safety first, says the PM, but the EU puts money and people at risk - 27th February
 * Dan Hodges: Those saying we should leave Europe are infected with madness - The out campaign is stark raving mad – come June, the majority of rational Britons will vote to stay in Europe - 27th February
 * Richard Walton: Being in the EU doesn't keep us safe from terrorists - Maintaining close links with our neighbours is the key to security, whether we are in or out of the EU - 27th February
 * Nicholas Soames: Churchill, my grandfather, always loved Europe - Today, as in the Forties, it would be madness not to play our part in saving the continent from disaster - 27th February
 * Andrew Lilico: How the EU would dominate us if we stayed inside - We hear a lot about the risks of Brexit, but here's a dispassionate look at what could happen if we remain in the EU - 27th February

see also EU Referendum



THE TIMES

 * Philip Collins: It will take an age to recover from this victory for the exit fantasists - They are going to find that everything is their problem now. So then exit fantasist, it is time to make good on your histrionic promise of liberty - 24th June
 * Philip Aldrick: Britain has cast itself adrift - Britain has just committed an act of self-harm. Nine out of 10 economists warned that leaving the European Union would make people poorer, yet that is what they have chosen - 24th June 2016
 * Oliver Kamm: Markets in turmoil as UK enters uncharted waters - It’s likely that central bankers in Britain and the eurozone will co-ordinate a further easing of monetary policy, but their room for manoeuvre is limited - 24th June
 * Tim Montgomerie: If we don’t break free today, we never will - The EU and US have paralysed political systems where it’s almost impossible to get anything done. Britain can be different - 23rd June
 * David Aaronovitch: Leave campaigners sound a lot like Enoch - The immigration rhetoric has been dangerous and polarising, while the sovereignty argument is as weak as it was in ’75 - 23rd June
 * Alistair Osborne: Making Remain their business - Seeing that your boss has signed the letter might, for some, be the clincher for voting out - 22nd June
 * Matthew Parris: Here’s why metropolitan elite really knows best - Londoners work harder, pay more in, have a tougher lifestyle, and know more about the world outside, than the provincial England where I’m lucky enough to live - 22nd June
 * Daniel Finkelstein: Nothing adds up on Leave’s fantasy island - To survive post-Brexit we’d need more immigration and lower pay. Do Out supporters really know what they’re backing? - 22nd June
 * Rachel Sylvester: MPs need to drain the swamp they created - The referendum battle has degenerated into xenophobia. As MPs mourn Jo Cox, they must all look at their own behaviour - 21st June
 * Melanie Phillips: We’re choosing between freedom and serfdom - Brexit may cost us in the short term but I’d rather be poor than give up our right to govern ourselves - 21st June
 * Matt Ridley: An exciting world is waiting outside the EU - If we don’t go global on Thursday, we’ll condemn ourselves to joining a painful project to turn a continent into a country - 20th June
 * Adam Boulton: This is a messy battle of MPs v the people - The will of the people will have disregarded the considered opinions of 71% of their elected representatives, including Jo Cox. That’s the problem with referendums. They can set the people against their politicians, and leave a mess behind - 20th June
 * Dominic Lawson: The EU credit card has cost us our sovereignty. So now let’s cut it up - If Britain votes this Thursday to remain a member of the European Union, it will be the result of a misunderstanding. Not a new one, but the misunderstanding that has been deliberately fostered since this country signed the treaty of accession in 1972 - 19th June
 * Matthew Parris: The lesson of Jo Cox’s death? There isn’t one - Remainers must resist the temptation to blame the Leave campaign. Nobody can account for the actions of disturbed minds - 18th June
 * Ed Conway: There are no facts, only guesses in this vote - Before having your say on Britain’s EU membership, consider which half-truths to believe - 17th June
 * David Aaronovitch: The kids are all right so give parents a break - Mothers and fathers are blamed for everything from obesity to self-harming, but child-rearing has never been better - 16th June
 * Jenni Russell: Brexit would put hard-won freedoms at risk - We can stand up to China or Russia with the EU behind us. Alone, we’ll cut a sorry figure - 16th June
 * Simon Nixon: Britain’s referendum threatens to send shockwaves across Europe - 16th June
 * Alice Thomson: Leave or Remain, the NHS is in its death throes - Even the best hospitals are now struggling. We need a dedicated health tax or must switch to a social insurance scheme - 15th June
 * Daniel Finkelstein: Let’s face it, the EU rescued us from failure - Would Britain risk joining if it wasn’t a member? No chance. That doesn’t change the fact we’ve had a 40-year success story - 15th June
 * Jacob Rothschild: All the evidence shows that Brexit would be a disaster - We shouldn’t accept a diminished role on the world stage - 15th June
 * Rachel Sylvester: Labour arrogance is destroying the party - Corbyn and his clique hold the key to referendum victory but there’s a fundamental breach with working-class voters - 14th June
 * Gisela Stuart and Andrea Leadsom: Workers’ rights will be safe after Brexit - Ignore the scares about a bonfire of employment regulations - 14th June
 * Paul Johnson: Immigration limits won’t lift Britain - The facts around immigration more generally have been tough to discern amid the guff put out on either side of the argument. So let’s start with three important facts - 14th June
 * Robin Pagnamenta: There is another battle for power going on behind the EU debate - 13th June
 * Steve Hilton: Brexit will give power back to the people - The ‘Take Control’ argument isn’t airy-fairy nonsense: it’s central to immigration and the economy - 13th June
 * Brexit: Why [[Rod Liddle] wants out] - If we stay in the EU, we will be consigning ourselves to a future that resembles the old USSR: no dissent, no alternative point of view permitted - 13th June
 * Brexit: [[A A Gill] argues for ‘In’] - We all know what “getting our country back” means. It’s snorting a line of that most pernicious and debilitating Little English drug, nostalgia - 13th June
 * David Smith: Britain succeeds in the EU: we’d be daft to leave it - It is time to put up or shut up. Should we stay in or leave the EU? Those who have been following my pieces in recent months will not be surprised by my verdict - 12th June
 * Adam Boulton: So we voted to leave. Er, right, now what? - Imagine looking back from October 1, 2016, 100 days after the UK’s historic vote for Brexit. The decision to leave the European Union has resulted in an unprecedented period of turbulence and uncertainty in Britain - 12th June
 * Dominic Lawson: The queue outside the doctor’s that leads all the way out of the EU - Millions of people at the bottom of the employment market, or heavily reliant on public services, are sure their welfare is being adversely affected by the unprecedented levels of migration from the EU, notably the more recent member states of eastern Europe; they don’t blame everything on “Tory cuts”. - 12th June
 * John Scarlett: Leaving the EU puts our security at risk - We need to maintain close intelligence ties with our European partners if we are to face down growing global threats - 11th June
 * Philip Collins: The Leave camp has no clue where it’s going - The fatal weakness of the motley crew who argue for Brexit is that they all appear to believe in different things - 10th June
 * Edmund Conway: We’ll all pay dearly for EU referendum lies - Whatever the result on June 23, public trust in the facts has been irreparably damaged - 10th June
 * Simon Nixon: Stop thinking about jobs as British and realise that they are European - If the UK votes to leave the European Union, it is clear it will be largely because Britons are no longer willing to accept the right of EU citizens to live and work in the UK - 9th June
 * Tim Montgomerie: Immigration is the rock that will sink Remain - The Achilles’ heel of the Remain argument is the widespread fear that too many people are coming to these shores - 9th June
 * Melanie Phillips: Turkey is a Trojan horse endangering Europe - Erdogan has exploited the migrant crisis to demand visa-free travel and is a dangerous Islamist - 7th June
 * Roger Carr: Staying in an improved union is the only way to go - 6th June
 * John Longworth: It is time to end rule by the old elites of Europe - 6th June
 * Oliver Kamm: Brexiteers’ talk of broad agreements overlooks recent trading history - 6th June
 * Matt Ridley: The next Apple should be grown in Europe - The continent has potential to be a tech powerhouse. Instead we’re stymied by EU regulation that deters entrepreneurs - 5th June
 * Dominic Lawson: Suddenly the anti-EU left wants in — all because it fears the British voters - Jeremy Corbyn had been a steadfast opponent of our membership of the EU for more than 40 years - 5th June
 * Malcolm Rifkind: Are we giving away too much sovereignty to Brussels? No - How many people are aware that Britain’s net contribution to the EU is a tiny 1.2 per cent of UK public expenditure? - 4th June
 * Philip Aldrick: Brexit is as much the Continent’s problem as it is our own - 4th June
 * Mark Littlewood: Once I bought into the EU dream. Now I’m voting Out - Bureaucratic obsession has turned it into a petty, interfering, interventionist, illiberal enterprise - 3rd June
 * Roger Boyes: Diplomats need dragging into the modern era - Underfunded, out of touch, slow to respond, the Foreign Office has to adopt a tougher approach - 1st June
 * Daniel Finkelstein: Europe’s battle scars should bind us together - Peace is precious and fragile, and to take it for granted is complacent. It’s rightly at the heart of the Brexit debate - 1st June
 * Rachel Sylvester: The Europe battle is turning into class war - Brexit Tories resenting the ‘posh’ image of the party are mirrored by Leave voters who detest the pro-EU establishment - 31st May
 * Vernon Bogdanor: Churchill would think hard and vote Remain - Having seen Europe torn asunder, the wartime leader knew the value of unity more than most - 30th May
 * Niall Ferguson: Fog in Channel: Brexiteers isolated from Britain’s duty to save Europe - 29th May
 * Adam Boulton: Psst! Voters, are you plotting a June surprise? - 29th May
 * Giles Coren: Quiz time: Is it ‘Yes’ or ‘No’ to Johnny Foreigner? - When you’re being bombarded with absurd predictions from Leave and Remain, it all comes down to personal prejudice - 27th May
 * Iain Duncan Smith: A Remain vote is a grave threat to the City - Ignore the dubious forecasts. Financial services and the wider economy will suffer if we’re shackled to the floundering EU - 28th May
 * Giles Coren: Quiz time: Is it ‘Yes’ or ‘No’ to Johnny Foreigner? - When you’re being bombarded with absurd predictions from Leave and Remain, it all comes down to personal prejudice - 28th May
 * Philip Collins: Here’s how to solve the immigration problem - Higher wages and better training for local workers will make them more competitive against their foreign counterparts - 27th May
 * Ros Altmann: Brexit would hit pensioners hard - The Treasury’s figures show an economic shock will affect older people - 27th May
 * Tim Montgomerie: Britain will be better off out of sickly Europe - Now that Cameron can no longer use the civil service as a propaganda tool, the economic argument begins in earnest - 26th May
 * Frank Field: Vote Leave and kick Cameron out of Downing Street - Labour has a great incentive to give the government a punch on the nose - 25th May
 * Hugo Rifkind: Brexit banter is costing the Tories dear - The spat between Iain Duncan Smith and Sajid Javid highlights the danger of pandering to your political friends - 24th May
 * Matt Ridley: Brexit optimism is an example for Remainers - The relentless negativity and propaganda of the pro-EU camp contrasts with a bright future painted by its opponents - 23rd May
 * Roland White: Game on for EU’s custard pie policies - 22nd May
 * Nigel Crisp and David Nicholson: For the health of the NHS, we prescribe a vote to stay in Europe - 22nd May
 * Matthew Parris: Referendums are no way to make decisions - Cameron will rue the day he resorted to plebiscites to settle big issues. They’re a tool of demagogues and dictators - 21st May
 * Ed Conway: Why the EU is keeping quiet about Greek debt - The eurozone should stop pussyfooting around and accept the country will never pay back its creditors - 20th May
 * Tim Montgomerie: Cameron must resist opening up Tory wounds - Whether or not Downing Street encouraged the Heseltine intervention, it is playing dirty in the referendum campaign - 19th May
 * Simon Nixon: Critics of Europe’s record on reform should focus on national governments - 19th May
 * Oliver Kamm: An independent Bank of England governor has the right to express his personal view - 19th May
 * Ian Livingston, Mervyn Davies, Stephen Green: Brexit would be an act of national folly - 18th May
 * Dan Snow: Hitler isn’t the only lesson from Europe - Britain has had greatest influence when it has been involved, not detached - 18th May
 * Alice Thomson: Cameron desperate to win over rural Brexiteers - Although farmers benefit from being in the EU, most country dwellers feel ignored by Westminster and Brussels - 17th May
 * Peter Hargreaves: The EU strangles business so we have to break free - Companies that want to remain are predominantly headed by overpaid bureaucrats who care little about the future of our nation - 16th May
 * Dominic Lawson: Even Sir Humphrey would agree: the only way to subvert the EU is to leave - 15th May
 * Giles Smith: Getting out of Europe gets nul points from me - True, other nations gang up to humiliate us, but we can’t desert the song contest that’s created 60 years of harmony - 13th May
 * Patrick Minford: Britain can thrive outside EU even without trade deals - 13th May
 * Oliver Kamm: Brexiteers are peddling untruths about immigration - Free movement of labour benefits Britain - 13th May
 * Edmund Conway: In or out of the EU, the economy’s in a mess - With high debt and low productivity, our problems go far deeper than referendum uncertainty - 13th May
 * Jenni Russell: Political lies and smears simply lead to cynical voters - The EU debate has been coarsened by the desire for easy headlines and the wish to avoid real argument - 12th May
 * David Davis: The single market only benefits big firms and lobbyists - Britain has been falling behind our non-EU competitors - 12th May
 * Simon Nixon: Another Greek crisis is not needed in middle of Brexit debate - 12th May
 * Daniel Finkelstein: The most reliable polls are at the end of a phone - If you think the EU referendum looks neck and neck, you’re probably wrong. Much depends on the kind of polling that’s been used - 10th May
 * Jonathan Evans and John Sawers The EU can’t dictate to us on security but staying in it can keep us safer - 8th May
 * Tommy Stubbington: What’s holding back Britain? - The looming Brexit vote, a consumer slowdown and worries about China have put the economy on a leash - 8th May
 * Philip Aldrick: It’s not the Bank’s fault that Brexit dominates economic debate - Mark Carney is, by general consensus, the most powerful unelected official in Britain today. For Brexit campaigners, it’s a problem - 7th May
 * Gerard Lyons: We don’t need trade deals to boom after Brexit - Leaving will not only be good for business but will give us an outward-looking global vision - 6th May
 * Philip Aldrick: Referendum fears may mask serious economic woes - 6th May
 * Simon Nixon: EU corpse chooses crucial moment to show signs of life - The timing is ironic to say the least. Eurosceptics have long complained that the British economy is “shackled to a corpse”... - 5th May
 * Pascal Lamy: Britain won’t get better trade deals if it leaves Europe - As a former head of the WTO, I know what I’m talking about - 3rd May
 * Matt Ridley: Britain’s role has been to break up Europe - The English Channel has kept us apart from continental wrangling. Now we have a chance to engage more globally - 2nd May
 * Charles Dunstone: Risk can be good business, but Brexit is sailing into the unknown - 1st May
 * Tim Montgomerie: Brexiteers threaten Labour more than Tories - Despite the focus on ministerial infighting, Corbyn has more to lose from the success or failure of the Leave campaign - 28th April
 * Roger Boyes: Brexiteers should embrace Marine Le Pen - Rather than treat Europe’s far right with disdain, Outers ought to learn from them - 27th April
 * Ted Cruz: Britain will be at the front of the queue for a US trade deal - If I am elected president the special relationship will be strengthened - 27th April
 * Rachel Sylvester: Brexiteers are opening wounds that won’t heal - By focusing on how the EU hurts our public services, Out campaigners are wrecking any chance of reuniting the Tory tribe - 26th April
 * Edi Rama: It’s absurd to drag Albania into the battle for Brexit - My country does not provide a model for Britain to follow - 26th April
 * Oliver Kamm: Obama poses a question that Brexit campaigners are no nearer answering - 26th April
 * Dominic Lawson: Obama has every right to urge ‘remain’ — even if he’s got it all wrong - He believes it is in the interests of the United States that the UK remain part of the EU - and he is sworn to protect and defend those interests - 24th April
 * Adam Boulton: Europe’s in the bag; now Dave is going global - 24th April
 * Janice Turner: The king of cool carries no clout on Brexit - While Cameron might believe that Obama can sway the don’t-knows, in reality we love thumbing our noses at America - 23rd April
 * Ben Macintyre: Is it nobler in the mind to Leave or Remain? - Shakespeare In or Out: that is the question. Though a natural European, he was also scathing about Britain’s neighbours - 22nd April
 * David Aaronovitch: The Queen and the EU aren’t so very different - The monarchy is expensive, inefficient and we’ve never voted for it. Like Brussels, it’s far from perfect but we need it - 22nd April
 * Edmund Conway: By staying in the EU we can help to dismantle it - Amid the scare stories put about by both sides, there may be one good reason for voting Remain - 22nd April
 * Matt Ridley: British scientists would be better off out of the EU - The European parliament is a hotbed of anti-scientific gullibility - 21st April
 * Simon Nixon: Gove is wrong when he says Brexit will be cheered across Europe - 21st April
 * Hugo Rifkind: Fear is a perfectly good reason to stay in the EU - The tactic worked in the Scottish vote and it should work now. Being afraid of change is the essence of conservatism - 19th April
 * Andrew Mackenzie: Britain must stay in the European Union - Proponents of Brexit argue that by leaving the European Union, the UK will win back a long-lost and precious commodity: pure, undiluted sovereignty. Yet in a globalised economy, Britain’s sovereignty and ability to project power globally is strengthened by EU membership - 18th April
 * Niall Ferguson: Brexit’s happy morons don’t give a damn about the costs of leaving - 17th April
 * Nick Robinson: To win the vote but lose your party doesn’t look so funny now, eh PM? - 17th April
 * Roger Scully: Brexit, steel and Panama: a perfect storm for Welsh Tories - 17th April
 * David Smith: Let’s hope it is just Brexit fear that’s hitting growth - 17th April
 * Matthew Parris: This is a battle for the soul of the Tory party - Be under no illusion, voting Leave will destroy moderate Conservatism and give the rightwingers ultimate victory - April 16th
 * Janice Turner: You can’t brainwash every Brexiteer granny - It’s patronising and outrageous that Remain campaigners think the elderly should simply obey their young overlordsIt’s patronising and outrageous that Remain campaigners think the elderly should simply obey their young overlords - 16th April
 * Alistair Osborne: EU’s poster girl for Brexit campaign - 12th April
 * Clare Foges: Both Inners and Outers need to keep it simple - The best EU referendum strategy is to hammer home your main selling point relentlessly - 11th April
 * Liam Fox: Brexit can liberate not just us but the whole of Europe - 10th April
 * Robert Lea: Something here for everybody - In the arid desert that the intellectual debate around Brexit has become, the latest trade figures are an oasis from which combatants can draw deeply - 9th April
 * Simon Nixon: The biggest impact of Brexit could be felt in Europe - April 7th
 * John Longworth: Only by leaving the EU can we save our foundation industries - April 6th
 * Ian Mulheirn: Brexiteers have got their campaigning completely wrong - The problem with leaving the EU is the politics, not the economics - 6th April
 * Roger Boyes: Dutch could deliver a new blow to EU project - If the right triumph in the referendum on a deal with Ukraine, Putin will be the real winner - 6th April
 * Daniel Finkelstein: Trying to silence Obama over Brexit is absurd - America’s postwar protection of Europe makes it not only the president’s right to speak out, but his responsibility - 6th April
 * Tony Abbott: Britain must stay and save Europe, not abandon it - The argument that the UK would flounder outside Europe is both demeaning and wrong - 2nd April
 * Giles Smith: Prepare for a flood of wine-drinking migrants - As Brexit looms, those who decamped to sunny gîtes are on the march back to Britain. Will they be able to integrate? - 2nd April
 * Daniel Finkelstein: Are you sure you want the facts about Europe? - Undecided voters say they could make up their minds if they had unbiased information. If only it were that simple - 30th March
 * Simon French and David Buik: City experts who can’t agree go head-to-head on Europe - City trading desks are as divided as households across the country on British membership of the European Union - 30th March
 * Oliver Kamm: Europe is in recovery, not decline, and Britain would be better placed within it - Populists on left and right have missed what’s happened in Europe since 2010. The crisis is over and the currency union is stable and enduring - 29th March
 * Philip Hammond: Our urge to leave Europe is strong - but could be ruinous - 27th March
 * Niall Ferguson: It takes a network to defeat a network, so our best weapon against Isis is the EU - 27th March
 * Philip Collins: Labour needs to speak up on Europe, quick - Without the party’s votes Remain can’t win, so the left needs to hold its nose at working with Tories and get canvassing - 25th March
 * Sebastian Mallaby: It looks as if Boris has hired the wrong Brexit adviser - The mayor’s economic expert is making all the Remain arguments - 25th March
 * David Aaronovitch: Terror attacks have nothing to do with Brexit - We dishonour victims of the Brussels atrocities by using them in the war of words over Britain’s EU membership - 24th March
 * Jesse Norman MP: You won’t catch me telling you how I’ll vote on the EU - So many people cannot possibly know how Brexit would affect them - 24th March
 * Simon Nixon: Germany braces for the unhappy prospect of a messy Brexit divorce - 24th March
 * Pierre Pettigrew: Sorry Boris, Canada is not a model for post-Brexit trade - It could take Britain ten years to agree new deals with world powers - 23rd March
 * Oliver Kamm: Brexit would play into the hands of Putin - Russia has formed an ugly alliance with Europe’s far-right. They mustn’t win the propaganda war - 21st March
 * Dominic Raab MP: Tyrannical EU threatens our liberal laws - From arrest warrants to free speech, Britain finds its legal judgments increasingly dominated by an inflexible Europe - 19th March
 * Simon Nixon: The UK is far from marginalised or lacking in influence in Europe - 17th March
 * Afzal Khan MEP: There will be no EU army but Brexit will make us less safe - 16th March
 * Fabian Picardo: A vote to leave the EU would be a dire threat to Gibraltar - The Rock has protected key trade routes and British interests for centuries - 15th March
 * Oliver Kamm: British exporters face risk of higher barriers to trade after Brexit - 15th March
 * Natalie Bennett: We cannot sit back and watch the UK sleepwalk out of the European Union - The Green party believes that we flourish best in the UK when we work together to face our shared challenges. As such, our party wants the UK to remain an integral part of the European Union - 14th March
 * Matt Ridley: Trade treaties are old hat. Let’s move on - Enough red tape: most British imports and exports continue quite happily and legally without complex agreements... "Outside the EU, Britain could buy what it needs more cheaply and sell what it’s good at making" - 14th March
 * Jeremy Clarkson: Call up the paparazzi army to take Brussels — and keep us in Europe - After a month of campaigning for a normal election, we are usually fed up with the mudslinging and the overanalysis and the infernal polls. But this Brexit referendum seems different, because it seems we are not - 13th March
 * Dominic Lawson: Don’t fret, Your Majesy: the Scots can’t afford to jump ship if we vote for Brexit - 13th March
 * Alexander Christie-Miller: Turkey is milking this crisis for all it’s worth - President Erdogan is more interested in consolidating his hold on power than in money or EU membership - 12th March
 * Cormac Lucey: The EU has brought this backlash upon itself - By pushing integration too far, champions of the European ideal have provoked fury in Britain and elsewhere - 11th March
 * John Whittingdale: Britain is strong enough to thrive outside the EU - Business and democracy will benefit from Brexit - 10th March
 * Daniel Finkelstein: Moaning about Project Fear is plain bonkers - If you keep repeating your opponent’s message you just reinforce it in voters’ minds, making them even more risk-averse - 9th March
 * Philip Aldrick: It’s the day after Brexit, and the markets are in freewill - The Bank of England and the Treasury are preparing contingency plans for the market aftermath of Brexit - 9th March
 * John Longworth: We must be bold and leave the EU before it’s too late - Britain faces a choice between the Devil and the deep blue sea - 8th March
 * Rachel Sylvester: Don’t think Brexit will solve the migrant crisis - The Leave campaigners seem to believe that you can deal with this colossal problem by pulling up the drawbridge - 8th March
 * Dominic Lawson: They only turn to Brussels when they give up on Britain - Is Lord Rose, the former boss of Marks & Spencer, a double agent? - 6th March
 * Peter Westmacott: Brexit will signal to America that we’ve given up being a global player - 5th March
 * Lord Simon Wolfson: British business is better off outside the EU - Investment is being undermined by too much regulation - 5th March
 * Patrick Minford: Ignore Mandelson: We’d trade much better outside EU - In the long run Brexit will bring substantial benefits - 4th March
 * Lord Michael Dobbs: I’d be more afraid to stay in the EU than to leave - This democracy thing is so overrated. The Greeks invented it but they’ve been in chaos ever since. Doesn’t anyone ever learn? - 4th March
 * Priti Patel MP: ‘’Businesses must tear off this EU straitjacket’’ - European rules are suffocating the life out of small and medium-sized companies in Britain – 3rd March
 * Simon Nixon: ‘’Canada’s EU deal could be a template, but it’s not free trade’’ - Trade is one of the main battlegrounds in the Brexit debate, and one of the most confusing – 3rd March
 * Cheryl Gillan MP: ‘’Say goodbye to the Nanny Superstate’’ - If we vote to “leave” we will remain the world’s fifth largest economy on the doorstep of a group of countries that needs us economically – 2nd March
 * Rachel Sylvester: Cameron must resist the bully inside him - The prime minister has displayed an ugly side to his character which could cost votes in the EU referendum - 1st March
 * Philip Aldrick: London ‘would still thrive outside EU’ - 1st March
 * Hugo Rifkind: Scots will vote In but they’d secretly love Out - Nicola Sturgeon, Scotland’s first minister, knows that double standards will help secure her dream of independence - 1st March
 * Oliver Kamm: Current account deficit could become a costly problem after Brexit - Here’s a paradox. It’s no bad thing for Britain’s immediate economic prospects that the pound weakened sharply last week. But the reason for the weakness may prove highly damaging later on - 1st March
 * Chris Parry: Don’t count on the EU to protect us. Nato will do that - European countries lack a collective will - 29th February
 * Ian King: The last time we had a vote on Europe Britain was the sick man; not any more - If anyone doubted the importance of business in the EU debate, they will have been disabused by last week’s letter to The Times backing the “in” campaign - 29th February
 * Adam Boulton: Win and Cameron still faces a neverendum - 28th February
 * Dominic Lawson: Pass the bourbon and I’ll pour you a hard shot of truth about the EU - It’s good to see the chancellor doing his bit for British exports by talking down the pound - 28th February
 * Adam Boulton: Win and Cameron still faces a neverendum - Leave or remain? It will never be possible to have a complete record of how the British public’s attitudes to the European Union have evolved... - 28th February
 * David Smith: Britain whistled a happier tune after joining the EU - 28th February
 * Janice Turner: Confessions of a lonely, left-wing Brexiteer - Dinner party liberals are appalled that I’m in bed with Galloway, Farage and white-van racists. They need to get out more - 27th February
 * Philip Aldrick: Brexit would hurt the City’s export value and everybody would suffer - Brexiteers are right that most of the UK’s trade deals would survive. But the ones that don’t would be the ones that count, and the only meaningful new deals to strike would offer no relief from Britain’s immigration headache - 27th February
 * Melanie Phillips: Project Fear looks more like mafia blackmail - Military leaders strong-armed, civil service hobbled . . . this is blatant government manipulation - 26th February



FINANCIAL TIMES

 * Philip Stephens: Brexit: a vote that changes everything - A vote against the EU could also turn out to become a vote against the United Kingdom - 24th June
 * Janan Ganesh: Brexit: UK voters may soon come to miss a humiliated Cameron - He must prepare to be remembered for presiding over the end of 43 years in the European project - 24th June
 * Martin Wolf: Brexit will reconfigure the UK economy - Britain has prospered inside the EU but it will not do as well outside - 24th June
 * Chris Giles: Brexit means a bumpy road ahead for the UK economy - The vote for Britain to leave the EU will have grave consequences - 24th June
 * Philip Stephens: The perils of a populist paean to ignorance - Social media has muddied the line between prejudice and facts - 23rd June
 * John Gapper: Fleet Street’s European bite remains sharp - The referendum shows tabloids can reach people who advertisers do not value - 23rd June
 * Michael Skapinker: Two nations but only one trusts business and its allies - Large numbers of electorate feel alienated, mistrustful and disbelieving - 22nd June
 * Martin Wolf: Why I believe Britain belongs in Europe - The democratic EU of today owes immeasurably to British politics, values and courage - 22nd June
 * John Kay: Pollsters and bookies pose different questions - What does the probability of Remain is 52 per cent or 75 per cent mean? - 21st June
 * Janan Ganesh: A referendum that is both naive and necessary - Why is Cameron ‘putting us through this’? Because the pressure was too much to contain an eruption - 21st June
 * Wolfgang Münchau: European values are more important than economics - Many emerging countries have shunned Europe and chosen a finance-based US-style model of capitalism - 20th June
 * Tyler Brûlé: A cautionary referendum tale - The issue is also about the hundreds of thousands of talented, clever people who will leave the UK - 18th June
 * Gillian Tett: The finance geeks must have their say on Brexit - As with Lehman, technical points apparent only to experts can set off unpredictable chain reactions - 17th June
 * Sebastian Payne: Jo Cox’s death should temper the rest of the EU debate and beyond - Time to reflect on the increasingly visceral tone of politics in Britain - 17th June
 * Philip Stephens: The dubious lure of taking on the elite - The dirty little secret of EU membership is that it has been an economic success story - 16th June
 * Chris Giles: Economists’ rare unity highlights peril of Brexit - The profession may disagree on the detail of leaving the EU but the consensus is striking - 16th June
 * Martin Wolf: Brexit imperils the confidence of strangers - The uncertainty caused by a vote to leave the EU might trigger a sharp turnround in capital flows - 15th June
 * Janan Ganesh: The EU vote gives a hint that tribal loyalties may be shifting - How much longer will politicians swear fealty to a party system forged for an empire nation? - 14th June
 * Wolfgang Münchau: If Brexit wins out, let Britain go in peace - A nation’s wealth rests on its skills and policies — it is hard to see how leaving would change that - 13th June
 * Sebastian Payne: Labour is skirting around UK voters’ core concerns - The party is failing to satisfy on immigration ahead of the EU referendum - 13th June
 * Timothy Garton Ash: Brexit would compound all other European crises - There is an ever-present possibility of relapsing into barbarism - 11th June
 * Jonathan Powell: Brexit threatens two decades of peace in Northern Ireland - The Leave campaign ought to be clear about the consequences for the province - 11th June
 * Sebastian Payne: Can Brexiters be trusted on democracy and sovereignty? - Legally challenging the result of the referendum would be bad for British democracy - 9th June
 * Philip Stephens: The Brexiters’ ugly campaign to vilify Turks - Those in favour of leaving the EU judge that rational argument is best met with mendacity - 10th June
 * Robert Shrimsley: Brexit exam questions for the mathematically challenged - As the referendum debate rumbles on, are your addition and subtraction skills good enough? - 10th June
 * Martin Wolf: Brexiters’ idea of unilateral free trade is a dangerous fantasy - The EU’s regulatory harmonisation is not a perfidious plot against consumers - 10th June
 * John Kerr: Britain found a role — but is in danger of losing it again - Why would China listen to us if our sway with Europe, and hence the US, had shrunk? - 8th June
 * Sebastian Payne: Could a referendum on Turkey’s EU membership sink Brexit? - The government might take radical steps if Remain fails to gain momentum - 8th June
 * Sebastian Payne: David Cameron still doesn’t have an answer on immigration - The latest televised EU event highlighted the same flaw in the Remain case - 8th June
 * Chris Giles: Capital is not fleeing Britain because of Brexit - No need to worry yet — the evidence for a rampant flight from UK banks is feeble - 8th June
 * John Kay: My British and European identities are intertwined - The rational debate is not over sovereignty, but about who is best able to deliver services - 8th June
 * Gideon Rachman: Immigration could swing it for Brexit - This is a legitimate issue in the campaign that the Leave side would be stupid not to use - 7th June
 * Janan Ganesh: The liberals leading the Brexit charge are riding a statist tiger - You can see dazzling heterogeneity or many people lying to themselves and each other - 7th June
 * Lisa Pollack: Brexit - Immigration top tips for Brits and Europeans - How to manage new restrictions in the event of an Out vote - 7th June
 * Sam Leith: Brexit or Bremain? The ancient tactics in the referendum debate - Both In and Out camps are using Aristotle’s rhetorical tools — I think I can guess his choice - 6th June
 * Sebastian Payne: Is Britain on course for Brexit? - Polls point to a move towards a Leave vote but how decisive is that? - 6th June
 * Wolfgang Münchau: The eurozone cannot escape political and fiscal union - The idea of crisis resolution through insurance suffers from an internal contradiction - 6th June
 * Robert Shrimsley: Boris and Brexit: blond ambition and lashings of ginger beer - Does a man who is fighting for the soul of his nation spend his days leaning from a battle bus waving a Cornish pasty? - 4th June
 * John McTernan: Australia’s points system is more liberal than you think - Such a scheme in the UK would not have the effect that Brexiters expect - 3rd June
 * Philip Stephens: Brexit would tear Britain apart - If England left, it would make sense for Scots to swap one union for another - 3rd June
 * Mary Dejevsky: Vladimir Putin is not ready to toast Brexit - If the EU fails, the potential continental contagion would not spare Russia - 2nd June
 * Sebastian Payne: If anyone is to blame for Britain leaving the EU, it’s Tony Blair - The former Labour prime minister stoked public anger over migration - 2nd June
 * Michael Skapinker: What bosses can learn from the Remain campaign - Say what you have to say over and over to the point when you think staff will run off screaming - 2nd June
 * Chris Giles: Brace for the aftershocks of Brexit - None of the mitigating forces suggest voting Leave is remotely a risk worth contemplating - 2nd June 2016
 * Miriam González Durántez: Britain lacks the skills to go solo on trade deals - Hiring 475 new overseas negotiators will take more than good luck - 31st May
 * Delphine Strauss: The hedge funds’ EU referendum exit polls are not to be trusted - Pollsters will find it difficult to be accurate - 31st May
 * Sebastian Payne: Boris Johnson is not the British Donald Trump - The EU Outer is barely similar to the Republican presidential hopeful - 31st May
 * Alan Beattie: Wetherspoon takes on Lagarde of the IMF - The questions posed to the head of the fund are easy to answer, writes Alan Beattie - 30th May
 * Janan Ganesh: Tory infighting leaves UK voters cold - The referendum debate has made some MPs mutinous but the electorate simply does not care - 30th May 2016
 * Sebastian Payne: Conservatives are not yet at war - The focus should be the UK referendum, there is no appetite for a revolution - 30th May
 * Wolfgang Munchau: The real threat to EU lies in the Aegean - In its negotiations with Turkey over the refugee crisis Europe has lost the moral high ground - 30th May
 * David Abulafia: Britain’s island story that flags up Britain's differences - A Leave vote would be a recognition the the UK has always diverged from its neighbours - 28th May
 * Robert Shrimsley: Your handy Brexit guide to the next four weeks of fear - In case you miss it here are the best bits from the final days of the UK referendum campaign - 27th May
 * Martin Wolf: The self-inflicted dangers of the EU referendum - Cameron might soon be known as the man who left the UK in far-from-splendid isolation - 27th May
 * Philip Stephens: A Brexit myth of Brussels (mis)rule - Good or bad, imaginative or dull, the important decisions have been taken at home - 26th May
 * Janan Ganesh: Brexiters’ insouciance is the privilege of the rich - The Leave campaigners’ droll routine is all the worse for their pose as underdog yeomen - 25th May
 * Daniel Hannan: Why Vote Leave - A Eurosceptic imparts some intellectual ballast to the EU debate - 23rd May
 * Wolfgang Münchau: The IMF, Greece and calling Berlin’s bluff - If Europe wants to continue to ‘extend and pretend’ so be it. But it should be with their own money - 22nd May
 * Vincent Boland: Dublin struggles to influence Brexit vote - Not everyone is convinced that the Irish voice in the debate is loud enough to be heard - 22nd May
 * Turkish immigration - Is Turkey on course to join the EU and significantly increase migration to Britain? - 21st May
 * Philip Stephens: Brexiters have bet the bank on the triumph of emotion over reason - The goal was always to harness the myriad grievances of voters to revolt against Brussels - 20th May
 * Alan Beattie: Forget the EU, Britons are really concerned about BBC recipes - It is reassuring that the UK is focused on the big challenges - 17th May
 * Jacob Rees-Mogg: Gallantry needed if Tories are to reunite after EU referendum - The chances of a Brexiter being party leader grow if the UK stays in bloc - 16th May
 * Charles Grant: Brexit would be a challenge for Berlin - It would heighten resentment of the country’s power among many Europeans - 15th May
 * Martin Wolf: Britain after Brexit would sacrifice access for independence - We could still have free movement of people and the EU’s rules but the City would suffer - 13th May
 * Sebastian Payne: Why Vote Leave wants to keep Ukip’s Nigel Farage off TV - The official Brexit campaign believes Ukip’s leader will harm their cause - 12th May
 * Martin Sandbu: Mark Carney makes momentous intervention on Brexit - The Bank of England governor warns of serious economic consequences - 12th May
 * Ruth Lea: The City would have a strong hand to play post-Brexit - Commercial interests will prevail — a deal with London will be done - 11th May
 * Martin Wolf: Germany is the eurozone’s biggest problem - The monetary union will fail if it is run for the benefit of creditors alone - 10th May
 * Hiroaki Nakanishi: Japanese investors in Britain depend on the links to Europe - The UK should not squander its influence in the world’s largest bloc - 11th May
 * Sebastian Payne: David Cameron’s warning of war insults voters - The prime minister harms his case to remain in EU by playing the terror card - 9th May
 * Chris Giles: A risible case for Brexit based on dubious data - Erecting unnecessary trade barriers would threaten Britain’s relative prosperity - 4th May
 * Martin Wolf: Brexit: sovereignty is not the same as power - The very fact that the UK is holding a vote on membership of the EU shows that it is sovereign - 3rd May
 * Vernon Bogdanor: Europe is moving ever closer to Britain - If the UK stays it may be joined in an outer circle by other EU states - 2nd May
 * Martin Wolf: Do not let migration determine Britain’s place in Europe - A dynamic economy can gain from importing people who both want to work and have the skills to do so - 29th April
 * Philip Stephens: Millennials would bear the cost of Brexit - The paradox is that those most likely to be affected are the least likely to vote on June 23 - 28th April
 * Martin Wolf: Arguments for Brexit do not add up - The top 10 points in favour of an exit and how to rebut them - 27th April
 * Gideon Rachman: Barack Obama and the end of the Anglosphere - When supporters of the Vote Leave campaign sketch out a future for Britain outside the EU, they often point to the Anglosphere of English-speaking nations - 25th April
 * Janan Ganesh: UK immigration is the last refuge of the Leavers - It may not be enough to secure a victory in the referendum but it will enable them to lose well - 25th April
 * Sebastian Payne: Theresa May adds some Euroscepticism to the Remain campaign - The British home secretary is reluctantly backing a vote to stay in the EU - 25th April
 * Anand Menon: Britain’s military standing would not suffer after Brexit - Outside the EU, the UK would find it easier to work with European allies - 24th Apri
 * Linda Colley: Brexiters are nostalgics in search of a lost empire - It would be folly for Britain to leave the EU but national pride runs deep - 22nd April
 * Sebastian Payne: Barack Obama’s decisive intervention in the Brexit campaign - The US president’s remarks will be troublesome for Leave camp - 22nd April
 * Gideon Rachman: Boris Johnson’s Obama comments were ill advised but not racist - Phoney outrage is already dominating the EU referendum campaign - 22nd April
 * Tony Barber: Yes, Mr Gove, at heart we are all Albanians now - The instinct of the Ghegs and Tosks was to batter each other, like EU camps - 22nd April
 * Philip Stephens: Brexit may break Britain’s Tory party - The Leave campaign has opted for invective over rational argument - 22nd April
 * Robert Shrimsley: Brexit: We have a hostage situation - ‘They are going to demand a ransom. I heard them talking about £13n’ - 21st April
 * Roula Khalaf: The Brexiteers at the gates of the Lycée school - 21st April
 * Martin Wolf: Britain’s friends are right to fear Brexit - Despite absurd attempts to deny this, nobody knows what would follow a vote to leave the EU - 20th April
 * Sebastian Payne: The EU referendum’s Remain campaign needs some passion - Those who believe Britain ought to leave are more likely to vote - 20th April
 * Janan Ganesh: Only economics matters in the Brexit debate - No normal person, at least in Britain, cares about their country’s influence in the world - 19th April
 * Sebastian Payne: Fear, loathing and George Osborne dominate the Brexit campaign - The essential Remain and Leave arguments have been exposed today - 19th April
 * Lionel Barber, Sarah Gordon, Philip Stephens, Wolfgang Münchau, Gideon Rachman, Tony Barber, Chris Giles, Alan Beattie: Could Brexit be a good thing for Europe? - Our columnists debate whether there could be some upsides for other EU states if Britain leaves - 16th April
 * Alastair Campbell: How to win the Europe referendum in an age of disbelief - Each of us is an opinion-former and we must argue for Remain - 16th April
 * Philip Stephens: Why the Brexit crowd wants to silence Obama - The notion that there is a choice to be made between the Channel and the Atlantic is flawed - 14th April
 * Gideon Rachman: Boris Johnson, David Cameron and the day after Brexit - It’s a nightmare on Downing Street ... and there’s a long silence from Angela Merkel in Berlin - 12th April
 * Wolfgang Münchau: Why the EU must act on the No vote in the Dutch referendum - To ignore this poll would be to ask for trouble, especially from Eurosceptics in the UK - 11th April
 * Sebastian Payne: Pro-EU leaflets may backfire as anger spurs on Brexit campaigners - Posting gives impression the establishment is stacking debate in its favour - 8th April
 * Ian Livingstone: Brexit economics offer no solution for Britain’s steel industry - Leave campaigners ignore the fact that it is size and strength that matters - 7th April
 * Sebastian Payne: Jeremy Corbyn could hold the key to a Remain EU referendum vote - The UK opposition leader needs to make himself more visible in the debate - 4th April
 * Tony Barber: A British breakaway would hurt its European partners - Political friction might put a tariff-free British-EU trade regime beyond reach - 1st April
 * Peter Sutherland: The Brexiteers’ magical thinking on global trade - Leave campaigners know that trade policy is a jewel in the EU’s crown - 30th March
 * Wolfgang Münchau: A history of errors behind Europe’s many crises - I would not trust with my security somebody who cannot even contain a medium-sized financial event - 29th March
 * Andrew Gimson: The reasons for the Tory infighting over Europe - Cameron’s longevity lies in his subtle handling of Eurosceptics - 26th March 26th
 * Chris Giles: Crystal balls are no way to predict a post-Brexit world - The Leave campaign casts slurs on the integrity of economists who have little axe to grind - 25th March
 * Tony Barber: Trump and Brexit whirlwinds are tearing apart conservatism - The two centre-right parties are feeling the loss of mass political commitment - 23rd March
 * Sebastian Payne: Eurosceptics make the most of the Brussels attacks - The dynamics of the EU referendum are likely to shift in the UK, writes Sebastian Payne - 23rd March
 * Gideon Rachman: Wake up — Britain is heading for Brexit - The campaign for the UK to leave the EU has momentum and simple slogans - 22nd March
 * Philip Stephens: George Osborne handed ammunition to the Leave campaign - The chancellor had a simple task in his budget: avoid controversy ahead of the EU referendum. He flunked it - 19th March
 * Sebastian Payne: Boris Johnson is frightened of Barack Obama’s popularity - A presidential visit during referendum debate worries Out campaigners - 15th March
 * Roula Khalaf, Gideon Rachman, Tony Barber, Philip Stephens, David Gardner, Martin Wolf: How has the EU mismanaged the migrant crisis? - FT Debate: Our columnists pore over the bloc’s collective and individual mis-steps - 13th March
 * Robert Shrimsley: Project Fear, or just Project La-la-la? - ‘Project Fear calls for an Ernst Stavro Blofeld; Cameron is more like Blofeld’s director of communications, or maybe his osteopath’ - 12th March
 * Janan Ganesh: Brexit: passion is a vote-killer - Leavers have craved this referendum for decades and now expect to be wet-nursed through it - 8th March
 * Sarah Gordon: Businesses will lose heart over John Longworth’s exit - Big and small businesses are reluctant to take sides in acrimonious debate - 7th March
 * Merryn Somerset Webb: Why UK investors should back Brexit - The eurozone is heading for an existential crisis - 5th March
 * Peter Riddell: The dilemma for Whitehall civil servants - UK’s vote on Europe makes it tricky to enforce policy while staying impartial - 5th March
 * Tony Barber: Emmanuel Macron, French malaise and the British - Questions swirl around France’s economy minister and a potential Brexit - 4th March
 * Sebastian Payne: Too much drama from the anti-Brexit campaigners - The Ins need to think how the man in the street views their message - 3rd March
 * Jo Johnson: What would Brexit mean? Just ask Boris - A vote to leave would put our status as a science superpower at risk - 3rd March
 * Sebastian Payne: The Tory vitriol over Europe - The referendum campaign stokes up a feud between the Inners and Outers - 2nd March
 * Tony Barber: In Europe electoral confusion has become the norm - EU members succumb to political instability just when firm leadership is needed - 1st March
 * Janan Ganesh: The fiction of David Cameron as Flashgun - Calling someone cocky is like calling a film overrated: it has the effect of piquing people’s interest - 1st March
 * Wolfgang Munchau: Europe enters the age of disintegration - There will not necessarily be a formal break-up of the EU, but it will become less effective - 29th February
 * Robert Shrimsley: Gimme a Brexit break - ‘I’ve already heard every argument there is to hear on British membership of the European Union at least a dozen times’ - 26th February

see also In Depth - EU referendum at the FT



THE GUARDIAN

 * Gary Younge: After this vote the UK is diminished, our politics poisoned - During the campaign the very worst impulses were given free rein and voice. Britain is not greater for this decision but smaller, weaker and more vulnerable - 24th June
 * Simon Jenkins: The biggest threat of Brexit is not to the UK but to the rest of Europe - Although Britain has given itself an almighty shock, the visionary outcome of this leave vote ought to start a grand debate across the continent - 24th June
 * Owen Jones: Grieve now if you must – but prepare for the great challenges ahead - A working-class revolt has taken place, and frustration is spilling out in all sorts of directions. If Britain is to have a future, the escalating culture wars have to stop - 24th June
 * Jonathan Freedland: We have woken up in a different country - For the 48% who voted to remain, and for most of the watching world, Britain has changed in a way that makes the heart sink - 24th June
 * Rafael Behr: Brexit earthquake has happened, and the rubble will take years to clear - Westminster was the target of this referendum as much as Brussels – and the scale of the public’s demand for change is breathtaking - 24th June
 * Zoe Williams: Nigel Farage’s victory speech was a triumph of poor taste and ugliness - The Ukip leader said the country had voted to leave ‘without a single bullet being fired’. If he embodies the new politics, it will be boilingly unpleasant - 24th June
 * John Harris: The UK is now two nations, staring across a political chasm - Leave voters aren’t lemmings jumping off a cliff, and the left urgently needs to understand their choices - 23rd June
 * Michael White: In or out, Cameron's EU referendum may leave a toxic legacy - The history of the political device loved by populists is not a happy one. In Scotland, it has created divisions and one-party rule - 23rd June
 * Marina Hyde: Nazi propagandists v Avengers Assemble, with Gordon Brown as Hulk - After eight weeks of Faragese and cross-party crack teams, campaigners made their final speeches with the PM being outclassed by his former enemy - 23rd June
 * Owen Jones: There is a model for the new politics we need. It’s in Spain - Podemos has won support for radical ideas without creating scapegoats. Progressives in the UK must find a way to do the same - 23rd June
 * Natalie Nougayrède: Denial then panic: how the EU misjudged the British mood - Brexit would have far-reaching consequences for the whole European Union, yet for a long time leaders saw the UK referendum as a tedious sideshow - 23rd June
 * Suzanne Moore What does this vote mean if one feels utterly powerless in every other way?'' - This is a false choice between two different, but very similar elites. In the privacy of the ballot box, I will make my decision - 23rd June
 * Jonathan Freedland: This is why we must remain: if you're undecided, here's my final plea - One day before the biggest political decision of our lifetimes, and around 10% of the electorate are still undecided. Here are five compelling reasons to vote remain - 22nd June
 * George Monbiot: The shocking waste of cash even leavers won’t condemn - In or out, everyone seems to agree that the poor should keep subsidising the rich with land subsidies - 22nd June
 * Rafael Behr: What if the EU is doing the exact opposite of what it’s meant to do? - The argument that the European Union is a machine for cooperation turning into a discord engine is seductive. But withdrawal would accelerate the danger - 22nd June
 * Joshua Rozenberg: What are the legal implications if Britain votes leave? - Even if the electorate decides against the EU on Thursday, there will still be several legal obstacles confronting the Brexiteers before they can achieve their goal - 22nd June
 * Owen Jones: David Cameron’s fatal mistakes on immigration threaten our country’s future - A Brexit Britain would be down to the prime minister’s fuelling of anti-immigrant sentiment and his impossible promises on targets - 21st June
 * Matthew d'Ancona'Ancona: David Cameron and Steve Hilton – where do these close friends go from here? - 21st June
 * Polly Toynbee: On Friday I’ll get my country back. Britain will vote remain - This country is not the leave campaign’s ingrown place of phobias, conspiracies and fear of foreigners. Our generosity will defeat their meanness of spirit - 21st June
 * Paul Mason: Brexit is a fake revolt – working-class culture is being hijacked to help the elite - Leaving the EU won’t guarantee a rise in wages, a cap on rents, or a fall in NHS waiting times and class sizes. The only thing it guarantees is more rightwing Tory control - 21st June
 * Martin Kettle: Comparing David Cameron to Neville Chamberlain is insulting – and wrong - On Question Time the prime minister was likened to the Tories’ most despised leader. But Merkel is not Hitler and the EU is an institution of peace, not war - 21st June
 * Matthew d'Ancona'Ancona: As the vote looms, the reptilian core of the Tory brain is asserting itself - David Cameron knows that even a remain victory on 23 June won’t be enough to silence the Brexiters - 20th June
 * Will Hutton: EU referendum: ‘This is now a battle for an idea of Britain’ - The sentiments over the EU referendum are very real, dividing the country into two hostile camps - 19th June
 * Andrew Rawnsley: Will politicians use this time to swap poison for serious debate? - Jo Cox exemplified the best of British democracy. Emulate her in what remains of the referendum campaign - 19th June
 * Nick Cohen: Take your country back from those who seek to destroy it - Vote Leave has poisoned rational debate by endorsing paranoid populism, the spirit of our age - 19th June
 * Patrick Collinson: I like the EU, but I’m voting out - There are lots of positives about being part of Europe, but the impact on working people’s rents and wages is not among them - 19th June
 * Timothy Garton Ash : Remainers, your country needs you. Spread the word, and make a difference - The EU referendum is the most important vote in Britain for 40 years. As it approaches, let’s re-embrace democracy as a game in which we are all players - 18th June
 * Ian Jack: Scotland’s Europhilia stands between Cameron and catastrophe - Inners still lead outers amongst Scottish voters, with markedly different attitudes towards immigration and the continent than those south of the border - 18th June
 * Marina Hyde: So Britain, are you ready to enter the United Kingdom of Ukip? - Nigel Farage is about to achieve everything he wants. That alone should make leavers think again - 17th June
 * Jonathan Freedland: If you inject enough poison into the political bloodstream, somebody will get sick - 17th June
 * Gaby Hinsliff: America’s gun laws and our rush to Brexit are symptoms of fearful nations - Politicians on both sides of the Atlantic make a mistake by pandering to fear instead of defusing it. It can lead to bad decisions - 16th June
 * Martin Kettle: The EU referendum is a battle of the press versus democracy - The question of who runs Britain is not just about Europe but about a rightwing media that craves power - 16th June
 * Simon Jenkins: Hatred is constrained in politics by formal safeguards. Social media has let it loose - Jo Cox’s killing doesn’t show that order has broken down, but when social media turns antisocial, some policing regime is urgently needed - 17th June
 * Polly Toynbee: The mood is ugly, and an MP is dead - It’s wrong to view the killing of Jo Cox in isolation. Hate has been whipped up against the political class - 16th June
 * John Harris: Britain is in the midst of a working-class revolt - Across the nation this past week I’ve heard the same refrain: ‘No one listens to us, no one cares.’ Now those ignored for so long are demanding a voice - 16th June
 * Anni Hood: I challenged Michael Gove because Brexit flies in the face of true British values - I feel passionately that we’re better off in Europe. The leave campaign is a wolf in sheep’s clothing – that’s why I spoke out on Question Time - 16th June
 * Jonathan Jones: Farage’s poster is the visual equivalent of Enoch Powell’s ‘rivers of blood’ speech - This picture, filled with nonwhite faces, makes explicit the racism in Ukip’s vision of leaving the European Union - 16th June
 * Simon Jenkins: I fear German dominance. That’s why I’m for remaining in the EU - In the end, this referendum is about politics not economics. And a Britain that votes to stay in the club will wield serious clout - 16th June
 * Gary Younge: For 50 years voters have been denied a genuine debate on immigration. Now we’re paying the price - Politicians have always promised an ‘open’ discussion. But they refuse to acknowledge the wider context of war, inequality and environmental crisis - 15th June
 * Giles Fraser: Call me a liar, an idiot or a wrong ’un if you like, but I’m still voting leave - As a lefty Brexiter, I don’t want to get into bed with the likes of Boris Johnson and Nigel Farage, but it’s a matter of principle – the EU is not a natural love match for the left - 15th June
 * Rafael Behr: Unlike life and the universe, Europe has no simple answer - There’ll be a yes/no option on the ballot paper, but the only honest assessment of where Britain stands now is one nobody wants to hear: ‘It’s complicated…’ - 15 June
 * George Monbiot: The European Union is the worst choice – apart from the alternative - The EU is a festering cesspool. But it’s a crystal spring compared with what the outers want to do – surrender Britain’s sovereignty to the United States - 15th June
 * Lisa Mckenzie: Brexit is the only way the working class can change anything - Working-class people are sick of being called ignorant or racist because of their valid concerns. The EU referendum has given them a chance to have their say - 15th June
 * Anne Perkins: Osborne’s ‘punishment’ budget is restoking Project Fear. But it may work - These proposed cuts in the event of a leave vote would be hugely damaging. But they could scare people into sticking with what they know and voting remain - 15th June
 * Andrew Brown: Leave.eu’s cartoon is not just racist – it’s worse than that - A tweeted pro-Brexit image is redolent of the antisemitism that we thought had been purged from Europe for ever in 1945 - 15th June
 * Jonathan Freedland: Remain needs to change tack on immigration – or risk Brexit - The hour is very late, but Labour remain campaigners need to address the number one concern of people who will vote to leave Europe next week - 14th June
 * Polly Toynbee: Brexit supporters have unleashed furies even they can’t control - A leave vote will not solve people’s problems, and those feeling betrayed will lurch even further into racism and xenophobia - 13th June
 * Seema Malhotra, Chuka Umunna and Keith Vaz: Britain’s ethnic minorities are better off staying in the EU - Claims that Brexit would benefit non-European migrants are absolutely false – as we black and minority ethnic Labour MPs know only too well - 13th June
 * Craig Bennett: The leave campaign doesn’t want to talk about the environment. Here’s why - Climate has barely been mentioned during the EU campaign. But there will be grim tangible consequences for our air, sea and wildlife if we vote to exit - 14th June
 * Matthew d'Ancona'Ancona: We’re just 10 days from making the most terrible mistake on Europe - The leave campaign’s arguments on immigration may successfully exploit voters’ fears, but they are not only objectionable – they’re absurd - 13 June
 * Caroline Lucas and John Ashton: If we’re to win the climate struggle, we must remain in Europe - Concerted EU diplomacy helped secure a landmark agreement at the Paris climate change summit. We should not leave the field just as the battle is turning - 12th June
 * Kevin McKenna: Nicola Sturgeon’s EU position may return to haunt her - The first minister’s backing for Remain may misfire - 12th June
 * Andrew Rawnsley: Labour needs to seize the day and make a powerful case for Remain - Opposition voices against Brexit have been drowned out by the Tory-on-Tory slugfest. It’s time to speak up - 12th June
 * Marina Hyde: An Engxit in the football and a Brexit from Europe. Can we really do the double? - Tension, foreboding, friends reborn as enemies; Euro 2016 and the referendum promise to be much the same - 11th June
 * Jonathan Freedland: Which would you rather, President Trump or Brexit? It’s no contest - If Britain votes leave on 23 June it will be a hammer blow to the last 70 years of peace in Europe - 10th June
 * Owen Jones: Working-class Britons feel Brexity and betrayed – Labour must win them over - Too many working-class northern Labour voters are being seduced by Vote Leave’s disingenuous campaigning. The party has two weeks to reach them - 10th June
 * Dhananjayan Sriskandarajah: Leaving the EU would not bring immigration under control - The predictions about numbers were badly wrong. But human mobility is a fact of life, and Britain would still need workers from overseas - 10th June
 * Steve Richards: Jeremy Corbyn must be true to his party on the EU, if not to himself - The Labour leader can attract doubters to the case for remain, but he must look like he believes it himself - 10th June
 * Martin Kettle: Narrow, nasty, unprincipled: whatever has happened to Michael Gove? - The justice secretary is fronting a campaign at odds with his previous backing for open-door immigration. One wonders what his real motivations are - 10th June
 * Deborah Orr, Paul Mason and Rafael Behr: EU referendum: our panel on Boris Johnson and Nicola Sturgeon's TV debate - The Scottish first minister and ex-London mayor led their respective sides in ITV’s televised debate, but which camp came out on top? - 9th June
 * Anand Menon and Jonathan Portes: You’re wrong Michael Gove – experts are trusted far more than you - When it come to the EU referendum, academics offer research-based evidence so people can make a well-informed choice. We don’t tell them how to vote - 9th June
 * Kati Levoranta: Why did Angry Birds fly? Thanks to European cooperation - Finland’s membership of the EU means my company, Rovio, can draw on a cosmopolitan team to develop games. Britain would be unwise to fly the nest - 9th June
 * Owen Jones: It’s a cruel deceit to blame all our problems on immigration - Brexiters cynically attribute social ills to incomers. Those who believe them may soon face a harsh truth - 9th June
 * Jenny Jones: The EU is an outsized behemoth beyond reform – the Green case for Brexit - This top-down dogmatic project promoting endless industrial development and growth doesn’t fit with the Green vision of a future lived on a more human scale - 8th June
 * Rafael Behr: Brexit’s leaders want to smash the system – but they won’t pay the price - Job losses, market mayhem, panic – no side-effect of leaving the EU is too severe for Boris Johnson and Michael Gove - 8th June
 * Polly Toynbee: There is still time for hope – Brexiters can be persuaded - Leavers’ cynical exploitation of the left-behind has shocked the remain camp. But Labour canvassers talking to their own side can prevail - 7th June
 * Aditya Chakrabortty: Why would voters trust politicians on the EU? They’ve made false promises before - After Iraq and the economy ‘boom’, there is now a total disconnect between the political class and ordinary people - 7th June
 * Archie Bland: John Major’s attack was fun. But remain can’t win a Brexit popularity contest - The former prime minister calling Boris Johnson a ‘court jester’ was cheering – but a referendum on personalities is one that David Cameron’s side will lose - 6th June
 * Zoe Williams; Young people are being stiffed. They have to use their vote - High debts, zero hours: they are entering a world the old wouldn’t recognise. That’s why it’s crucial to register for the EU referendum - 5th June
 * Frances O'Grady and Enrico Tortolano: Is the European Union good or bad for British workers? - With the referendum looming, Frances O’Grady and Enrico Tortolano debate whether the EU protects employee rights, or champions corporate interests - 6th June
 * Harry Leslie Smith and Eddie Izzard: On the anniversary of D-day, we need the European Union more than ever - It would be a reckless leap into the dark to walk away from an organisation that has helped keep the peace. We owe it to our war dead to vote on 23 June - 6th June
 * Hilary Benn: The leave campaign would scrap workers’ rights. It must tell us which ones - Brexiters scorn the protections the EU affords UK employees, and would like to hold a bonfire of ‘red tape’ on safety, working hours, pensions and more - 6th June
 * Matthew d'Ancona'Ancona; If David Cameron wins the referendum, he must be ruthless with his Tory foes - The prime minister’s enemies are openly plotting to replace him with Boris Johnson. To restore party unity there will have to be sackings - 6th June
 * Andrew Rawnsley: This isn’t a Tory game of thrones, the stakes are high for everyone - In the final weeks of the European Union referendum campaign, all of the United Kingdom needs to be heard - 5th June
 * Martin Kettle: Our own bad habits have brought Britain to the brink of Brexit - Whether voters decide to leave or remain, we must address failures in our media, culture and politics - 4th June
 * Jean Quatremer: Dear Britain, if you stay in the EU, you will ruin our lives. Here is why - Only a vote for Brexit can save the European Union. So let yourself be won over by such brilliant leaders as Nigel Farage and Boris Johnson - 3rd June
 * Simon Jenkins: Leave or remain – Britain’s fortunes hinge on a Europe in need of repair - After experimenting with each side’s prejudices, it is clear to me where the greatest risk to our future lies - 3rd June
 * Patrick Stewart: I saw postwar Europe unite. We can’t let it unravel - My family history leads me to reject the thirst for isolationism of those who want to leave the EU: we need to embrace common sense and hope again - 2nd June
 * Hugo Dixon Luke Lythgoe: Six more Brexit myths from the Eurosceptic press - The electorate must not be misled when it votes on 23 June. That’s why it’s vital that the truth behind some recent startling headlines be exposed - 2nd June
 * Gary Younge: Ridiculing Brexiters is a sure way to lose the argument for staying in the EU - Disparaging the leavers’ arguments as being so flawed they are barely worth countering may turn out to be a very dangerous strategy for the remain camp - 31st May
 * Timothy Garton Ash: Whether it’s in or out, vote – even if you’re from New Zealand - Brexiters are strangely silent about voter registration. Are they afraid of democracy? - 31st May
 * Jesse Norman MP: To get this EU debate out of the sewer, it needs the Pulp Fiction treatment - Without a ruthless clean-up man, all this referendum seems designed to do is cover politicians of every stripe with ordure – fuelling voter disillusionment - 31st May
 * Suzanne Moore: This EU referendum debate is farcical. No wonder I’m still undecided - The discussion seems to have become the province of oddballs who lack conviction living in a retread of Dad’s Army – and those who aren’t sure how to vote may not bother - 30th May
 * Irvine Welsh: However we vote, the elites will win the EU referendum - The debate is essentially a neoliberal argument: which is the better way for citizens to be ripped off, as part of the EU or as an independent UK? - 30th May
 * Andrew Rawnsley: Our European allies dread Brexit, and they have good reason to fear it - The ambition of some anti-Europeans goes further than pushing Britain out. They hope to destroy the EU - 29th May
 * Nick Cohen: There’s nothing a Brexiter loves more than a good conspiracy - Rather than engaging in genuine debate, Vote Leave assumes the Remain camp is lying or plotting - 29th May
 * Yanis Varoufakis: Brexit is an empire-era trick. Only the radical case for Europe makes sense - Caroline Lucas, John McDonnell and I will show that leaving the EU would only benefit Britain’s oligarchs - 28th May
 * Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett, Uday Maudgil, Heidi Street, Nicholas Preston, Emily Clark: Why is the EU debate such a turn-off for younger voters? - Last night the BBC hosted an EU referendum debate aimed at addressing the concerns of under-30s. Did it succeed? - 27th May
 * John Harris: Whatever happens in this referendum, England’s disquiet is set to get a whole lot worse - The new ONS figures show a nation divided, as population shifts exacerbate existing tensions - 27th May
 * Ana Palacio: The EU is a beacon for the rule of law – dim it at your peril, Britain - What’s missing from the ubiquitous discussion about Britain’s EU referendum is the regulatory fog that would be created by a vote to leave - 27th May
 * Martin Kettle: What, no facts in the EU debate? You cannot be serious - It feels as if the enlightenment is at stake. Thank goodness historians are standing up for reason - 26th May
 * Virginia Bovell: Leaving the EU would be disastrous for my autistic son and thousands like him - Vulnerable people have been forgotten in this Brexit debate. Who will fill the roles caring for those with learning disabilities if Britain leaves the European Union? - 26th May
 * Owen Jones: A chance to defeat bigotry: that’s how to engage young people with the EU - As the Brexit campaign sinks into the gutter, the spirit that rejected Zac Goldsmith as London mayor can be summoned again - 26th May
 * Pavel Seifter: The real danger isn’t Brexit. It’s EU break-up - The rise of angry nationalists across Europe is threatening to destroy a union based on peace – while Russia waits to prey on its remains - 26th May
 * Jacqui Smith: The eight big questions on migration the leave campaign must answer - In this EU referendum, we are being asked to vote for a permanently poorer and less influential Britain – all in return for an unspecified immigration policy - 26th May
 * John Redwood: A vote to remain in the EU won’t be the last we hear of Brexit - More Conservatives want to leave the EU than will admit it. Remaining will split the party – and the country – further - 25th May
 * Liz Cookman: What if Turks talked about Britons the way Vote Leave talks about Turkey? - Watch out, the press might warn: if the UK stays in the EU hordes of the British migrants will come, imposing drunkenness, high heels and Christmas - 25th May 2016
 * Jonathan Freedland: The Greek bailout shows the EU is on its best behaviour – until 24 June - There’s a sense that our fellow EU states are avoiding issues that will fuel Brexiteers. Instead they are playing nicely, as they did with the loan to Athens - 25th May
 * Polly Toynbee: Vote Leave’s campaign of fear will cause lasting divisions - The xenophobic lies of Brexit supporters can only fuel resentment, whatever the referendum outcome - 24th May
 * Daina Taimina: Together the EU is greater than the sum of its parts - When I first visited the EU in 1995, I didn’t really understand it. But once my country, Latvia, joined, its strengths became clear - 24th May
 * Beatrice de Graaf: My advice to Brexit battlers: forget Hitler, think Wellington - The British ‘balancers’ brought a century of peace and stability to Europe after the defeat of Napoleon. How the EU debate could use their spirit of moderation - 24th May
 * Paul Mason: How will the Brexiteers react if they lose? Expect bitterness and frustration - The right’s attitude to migration could get even nastier, but a Remain vote will offer Labour a fresh chance to reconnect with ‘red Ukip’ - 23rd May
 * Anton Muscatelli: Here’s the economic reality of Brexit – without the unicorn fantasy - Leave campaigners conjure up a scenario in which the UK can design its own economic environment. But the impact of an EU exit is complex - 23rd May
 * Matthew d'Ancona'Ancona: Cameron won’t purge his Brexit rebels, but there will be a reckoning - If he wins the EU vote, the prime minister will seek a united party. But he won’t forgive – or forget – the likes of Boris Johnson - 22nd May
 * Boris Vezjak: Euroscepticism is a lonely idea without serious foundation - Slovenia cannot afford an exit, economically or politically – and despite the EU’s flaws, we should not reject its project of inclusive, democratic society - 23nd May
 * Andrew Rawnsley: To claim victory now would be a fatal error for the EU In camp - Bookies and pollsters are suggesting that Remain will prevail, but campaigners should take nothing for granted - 22nd May
 * Larry Elliott: Brexit may be the best answer to a dying eurozone - Staying in the EU means hitching ourselves to an undemocratic project run by and for a remote elite - 20th May
 * Simon Jenkins: The luvvies’ Brexit letter only shows most people vote with their wallets - That our lucky stars of stage and screen benefit from the EU’s largesse should hardly be a clincher for anybody else - 20th May
 * Dreda Say Mitchell: It ain’t easy being a black Brexiteer - I argued alongside Nigel Farage in an EU debate. But his behaviour left me envious of the good sense and civility shown by the other side - 18th May
 * Neringa Rekasiute: Travelling opened my eyes – the shared experience of the EU is invaluable - Lithuania’s vibrant expats are contributing a great deal to British society, and in exchange we learn great values to take back home - 18th May
 * Aditya Chakrabortty: The super-rich blackmail us with threats to leave the UK. We should call their bluff - An exodus of the very wealthy would affect the housing market, but it would not be the disaster people think - 17th May
 * Peter Wolodarski: Without cooperation in Europe, the roof will soon cave in - I think of the EU like a continent-wide residents’ association: not perfect, not loved, but so much better than the alternative - 17th May
 * Claudia Ciobanu: The EU forces corrupt politicians to come clean - The EU has an important role in the quest for fairer societies. Our similarities are greater than our differences, and shutting doors on each other won’t solve anything - 16th May
 * Paul Mason: The leftwing case for Brexit (one day) - There are many good reasons for the UK to leave the EU. But exiting now would allow Johnson and Gove to turn Britain into a neoliberal fantasy island - 16th May
 * Michael White: Boris, the EU and Hitler: bad taste, bad judgment - Ex-mayor’s offensive comments likening EU to Nazi dictator put him in the same league as rampaging Donald Trump - 16th May
 * Matthew d'Ancona'Ancona: Boris Johnson has pressed the big red button marked ‘Hitler’. Watch out - In the Tory civil war over the EU, leadership hopefuls will soon know if they have backed the right side - 16th May
 * Andrew Rawnsley: They wanted to gag Nigel Farage. Now Tory Outers sound like him - The Leave campaign is doubling down on immigration because it has been so badly beaten up on the economy - 15th May
 * Gianrico Carofiglio: Difference is Europe’s dream – indifference, its nightmare - Being European means not looking away and pretending not to notice. Because passivity is the fertile soil in which intolerance and hatred grow - 15th May
 * Sarah Marsh: What does the European Union mean in your country? - We want to hear from the other 27 member countries about the significance of the European Union where they live - 13th May
 * Garry Kasparov: Why Brexit would be the perfect gift for Vladimir Putin - An EU without Britain is exactly what the Russian president wants: a weakened institution with less power to confront his assaults on Europe’s borders - 13th May
 * Rafael Behr: Vote Leave may sideline Nigel Farage, but it can’t live without him - At the heart of the leave campaign is a tension between belief in one set of arguments and recognition that it can only win using contradictory views - 12th May
 * Gordon Brown: Here’s an inspiring view of Britishness to defeat the Brexiters - In our nation’s finest moments we were outward looking and engaged with the world. This can be our future - 10th May
 * Jonathan Freedland: Iain Duncan Smith’s Brexit intervention is ridiculous but effective - IDS claims David Cameron was controlled by Germany in the EU renegotiations. But this was always going to be a sideshow to the main debate - 10th May
 * Polly Toynbee: David Cameron v Boris Johnson live on TV: the EU debate we must have - Cameron’s ruled it out – but a Tory on Tory duel, not a speech, would let the prime minister demolish the hollow claims of the chief Brexiteer - 9th May
 * Paul Mason: The choice for Europe: rescue Greece or create a failed state - It’s no longer about austerity. This is a battle for the soul of Europe - 9th May
 * Simon Jenkins: Brexit could cause war? Utter nonsense, David Cameron - Our prime minister has brought history into the EU debate, with no good reason and plenty of illiteracy - 9th May
 * Matthew d'Ancona'Ancona: The EU vote will just be the start of a bitter Tory battle over Europe - The referendum is a fight over core modern values, and internal splits will not just magically heal after 23 June - 9 May
 * Nick Cohen: Brexiteers put their trust in paranoia and mendacity - Every country in the world that wishes us well thinks we should stay in the European Union - 7th May
 * Rafael Behr: A liberal sigh of disdain could see Britain tumble out of Europe - Brexiters’ biggest asset is anti-elite resentment. And pro-Europeans misunderstand that at their peril - 4th May
 * Peter Mandelson: Why is the Brexit camp so obsessed with immigration? Because that’s all they have - Since having its economic arguments blown apart, Vote Leave has had no other option but to rely on xenophobia - 3rd May
 * Stewart Lee: The EU debate is a cynical battle of big beasts, not beliefs - ‘It was instinct that drove the moth and the lizard to fight... Likewise, Boris’s Brexit position represents only a fight for personal betterment’ - 1st May
 * Polly Toynbee: Now it’s Cameron and the unions: thus does Brexit make bizarre bedfellows - A silver lining, of sorts – the prime minister has had to water down his malign trade union bill or abandon hope of winning the referendum on the EU - 28th April
 * David Cameron and Brendan Barber: On Europe even we can agree: for British workers it’s better in - We oppose each other on many things, but we both know the poorest in our country would be badly hit by a Brexit - 27th April
 * Sam Barker: Brexit would be disastrous for Britain’s farm animals - EU laws currently protect British animals from cruel farming practices. With these removed their lives would be incalculably worse - 27th April
 * John O'Farrell: Never mind the EU arguments, just look who’s talking - Confused about Brexit? Aren’t we all. So sticking with the people we trust might be all we can do - 25th April
 * Nick Dearden: TTIP is a very bad excuse to vote for Brexit - Barack Obama gave TTIP the hard sell, but leaving the EU would only make the controversial trade deal more likely – and possibly worse - 25th April
 * Matthew d'Ancona'Ancona: Whether it’s Brexit or remain, David Cameron is not going anywhere - If he loses the referendum, the prime minister will dig in and argue for continuity in a bid to scupper Boris Johnson - 25th April
 * Andrew Rawnsley: Brexit: Lessons from the east about what folly it would be to choose isolation - Brexit wouldn’t just cut us off from Europe – it would close the door on opportunities in rising economies across the world - 25th April
 * Hans Kundnani, Ylva Elvis Nilsson and Maria Torrens Tillack: Europeans watch our referendum debate with fascination and fear - We asked leading commentators in Germany, Sweden and Spain to assess attitudes in their countries to Brexit - 24th April
 * Jonathan Freedland: It took Barack Obama to crush the Brexit fantasy - The US president destroyed one of the Vote Leave campaign’s core arguments, ending a week that may define the referendum debate - 24th April
 * Giles Fraser: Why our landed gentry are so desperate to stay in the EU - The common agricultural policy takes from the poor and gives to the rich. Its effects can be felt in every British household, and seen in the deadly waters of the Mediterranean too - 21st April
 * Chris Bryant: This sceptic isle would most displease pro-Europe Shakespeare - The bard would not have pondered whether to Brexit or not to Brexit, His plays showed his love for Europe and a dislike of rampant nationalism - 21st April
 * Rafael Behr: This EU battle has blurred the party lines – and they may never be clear again - The referendum campaign has split the tribes and shown the need for a realignment in our politics - 20th April
 * Owen Jones: Where do we even start with Michael Gove’s hypocrisy on scaremongering? - Of course Cameron and Osborne are peddling fear, it’s what they do. But whose campaign released a list of murders and rapes committed by EU migrants? - 19th April
 * Hugo Dixon: The remain camp needs to change tack to win the EU referendum - It needs to do more than stress economic risks to make a positive impact on undecided voters - 19th April
 * Suzanne Moore: Why should anybody trust George Osborne’s Brexit scare figures? - The chancellor has proved himself incapable of predicting anything accurately. There’s no reason to believe his Brexit forecasts are any more trustworthy - 18th April
 * Matthew d'Ancona'Ancona: Obama is right on Brexit. But the EU status quo is a hard sell - Vote Leave can’t expect the UK to gain more control by isolating itself. This is an age of interdependence - 17th April
 * William Keegan: Brexit would be a messy divorce, and very hard on the children - The Leave campaign’s idea that renegotiation of trade terms with the EU will be easy is absurd. We will be suppliant outsiders, just as we were in the 1950s - 17th April
 * Jonathan Freedland: Who’d have thought it? Jeremy Corbyn could shape Britain’s destiny in Europe - With David Cameron weakened, Labour’s leader is now crucial to the remain campaign. But to avoid a Brexit he must do more - 16th April
 * Martin McKee: Brexit won’t save the NHS – because the real threat is closer to home - Vote Leave are wrong. Having worked in the NHS for 38 years, I know that it’s not Europe that jeopardises its existence, but our own government - 15th April
 * Simon Jenkins: Will Obama’s Brexit intervention make a difference? - The US president has declared his support for the remain camp. But Britons might not like outsiders meddling in their politics - 15th April
 * Martin Kettle: Corbyn’s ‘yes, but’ on Europe was right – we all think that too - All is not lost for the remain campaign, and the Labour leader could be its unlikely saviour - 14th April
 * John Redwood: The end of British austerity starts with Brexit - My budget shows that leaving the EU would transform this country’s finances – in particular the NHS, disability benefits and the property market - 14th April
 * Polly Toynbee: Well done, Jeremy Corbyn, for getting off the fence on Europe - The Labour leader is right to back the in campaign at last – even though it means embracing the Tories as the strangest of bedfellows - 14th April
 * David Miliband: Why Brexit would be nothing less than an act of political arson - We are being invited to throw away our power and our values. It would be a tragic miscalculation - 12th April
 * John Longworth: I resigned so I could tell the truth about Brexit – and what it will cost Britain to stay - The voices of the real economy are the grafters with good ideas – not the anti-Brexit multinationals who represent only 5% of British businesses - 11th April
 * Larry Elliott: David Cameron gambles on the status quo in EU referendum - Government’s tried and tested model for key electoral tests is to rely on voters’ innate conservatism to carry the day - 11th April
 * Nick Cohen: Lessons from the Dutch – watch the dangerous fringe - The myth-making of the far right and far left over an exit from Europe is delivering us into the hands of our enemies - 10th April
 * Chris Leslie, Adrian Bailey, Ben Bradshaw, Emma Reynolds: Decisive EU referendum victory is essential – we must help deliver it - Four Labour MPs urge Jeremy Corbyn to show more passion over the pro-Europe campaign - 9th April
 * Natalie Nougayrède: The Brexit nightmare is becoming reality. The remain camp is in denial - From Cameron’s Panama Papers debacle to the weakness of Merkel and Hollande, the omens for Britain remaining in the EU get poorer by the day. Does anyone care? - 8th April
 * Daniel Hannan: The £9m pro-EU leaflet says just one thing: we’re panicking - The in campaign was expecting to be well in front by now. Why else would it resort to such desperate measures? - 7th April
 * Toby Moses: Leftwing and tempted by Brexit? Remember the Tories are in charge - There are good reasons to vote to leave, but it would be Boris Johnson and co who would shape the future of an independent Britain - 7th April
 * Tim Dowling: Britain, prepare to be love-bombed by Europe - They can’t vote, but they will #hugabrit: it’s the campaign with a continental touch that could really break down British reserves of Brexit - 7th April
 * Andrew Rawnsley: Britain's membership of the EU could fall down the generation gap - The young say they are much more enthusiastic about staying in, but will they turn up on the day of decision? - 3rd April
 * Timothy Garton Ash: The BBC is too timid. Being impartial on the EU is not enough - Viewers and listeners need informed reporting on the referendum campaign, not just claim and counterclaim - 1st April
 * Stephen Kinnock: As MP for Port Talbot, I believe Brexit would be disastrous for British steel - The situation at Tata is a crisis made in Westminster, not Brussels, and it’s absurd of the leave campaign to suggest otherwise - 31st March
 * Polly Toynbee: Paul Dacre’s EU subsidies hypocrisy won’t halt the Daily Mail’s Euro-lies - The Mail editor has claimed £460,000 in subsidies since 2011. And yet his paper continues to attack the EU, with Brexit as its goal - 31st March
 * Simon Jenkins: On Brexit, gender, age and political party are no guide as to how we’ll vote - With so many facts about Europe’s future unknown, voters are making choices based on gut instinct - 31st March
 * Matthew Tree: For British expats in Spain, Brexit is a cloud over the sun - There are more British residents in Spain than any other part of Europe – and no one knows what will happen to us if Britain leaves the EU - 30th March
 * Nick Dearden: Don’t campaign for Cameron’s Europe - fight for a fairer EU future - Progressive parties can counter the rise of the far right and the threat of Brexit by building new democratic alliances across Europe - 30th March
 * Jackie Ashley: Let’s be brutally honest: this remain campaign is failing - The Brexiters may be cynical and wrong but they are showing some passion. At this rate they’ll win - 30th March
 * Owen Jones: The Brexiters’ grim list of EU criminals debases political debate - Eurosceptics were until recently denouncing the fear tactics of the Remain campaign. But it is Vote Leave that has dragged the debate into the morass - 29th March
 * Mohamed El-Erian: The Brexit muddle means pragmatism must win the day - Highly complex issue of EU membership means referendum remains uncertain and could prove hostage to sudden events - 29th March
 * Mary Dejevsky: Don’t despair, a silent majority can still keep Britain in Europe - Brexit dominates the debate, but shouldn’t we also consider the benefits of a popular vote to stay. The whole atmosphere of the UK, and Europe, could change - 29th March
 * Archie Bland: Alan Sugar v Bernie Ecclestone? It’s time for a celebrity moratorium on Brexit - No one cares what B-listers think about the EU. Campaigners will have to rely on boring facts and figures to win their argument - 28th March
 * Will Hutton: To protect workers’ rights, the left should come out fighting for the EU - Europe has enough critics in the Leave campaign without qualified, half-hearted advocacy from Corbyn - 27th March
 * Jeremy Hunt: A strong NHS needs a strong economy – we should not put that at risk with Brexit - A vote to leave Europe will create economic uncertainty and that will mean less money for the health service - 26th March
 * Owen Jones: To leave the EU over Brussels would be a huge victory for terror - The extremists would be overjoyed if their attack had swayed the Brexit result. Out campaigners should not play into their hands - 25th March
 * Martin Kettle: New Zealand’s decision on the flag has lessons for Britain’s EU referendum - Voters across the world, when given the chance to change things, tend to stick with what they know. Will this mean no Brexit? - 25th March
 * Alexander Temerko: Boris Johnson is the best hope for the Tories – and for Britain - We disagree over Europe, but only the London mayor has the pro-business instincts and global vision to unite the party and the country - 25th March
 * Sir Malcolm Rifkind: In the battle against crime and terrorism, we are far safer within the EU - EU intelligence sharing and European arrest warrants are vital. Security experts are agreed: to leave would be monumental folly - 23rd March
 * Dreda Say Mitchell: So what if I’m black and thinking about voting for Brexit? - Apparently I’m not alone: there are plenty of black and minority ethnic votes to be had if the out campaign gets it right - 22nd March
 * Polly Toynbee: Iain Duncan Smith will do anything for Brexit – even tell the truth - The former welfare secretary’s resignation was designed to cause maximum damage. The rest is crocodile tears - 22nd March
 * Matthew d'Ancona'Ancona: The Tories are split in two: this is where it gets really nasty - Fallout from Iain Duncan Smith’s resignation reveals divisions that go well beyond welfare and the EU - 21st March
 * Can Angela Merkel prevent Europe being eaten away at its core? - The German chancellor is at the heart of the EU project. But the migrant crisis and this week’s election reverse pose unprecedented threats - 17th March
 * Katherine Butler: Oh no we’re not – the clapometer says Brexit in the Guardian’s live debate - Public debate on Europe seemed in fine fettle, if the Palladium audience was anything to go by. But did the political theatre win over the undecided? - 16th March
 * Alan Johnson: The idea of Brexit is pure Project Fantasy. But the dangers are very real - The argument to leave the EU is based on deception and denial of the huge damage that leaving the world’s largest single market would do to our economy - 15th March
 * Megan Dunn: The Europe debate matters most to millennials – and we want to stay in - The EU is of immense value to Britain’s students. As young people, we must make our arguments heard because we will live with the result for a long time - 15th March
 * Matthew d'Ancona'Ancona: George Osborne’s budget message will be: this is no time for a Boris - The looming EU vote could leave the chancellor out of a job. So his speech on Wednesday will be a pitch to fend off his leadership rival - 14th March
 * Catherine Bennett: A rapturous day for misogyny if the EU embraces Turkey - Recep Tayyip Erdoğan doesn’t rate women very highly. So he’ll be pleased to find lots of chaps on his side - 13th March
 * Alastair Campbell: This slavish Brexit propaganda would make Pravda proud - Anti-European bias in the rightwing press has plumbed new depths of dishonesty - 13th March
 * Jonathan Freedland: Brexit: the Queen is a powerful asset, but she is being exploited - She’s the human link to Britain’s finest hour. No wonder the Eurosceptic press find her irresistible and are desperate to prove that she’s on their side - 12th March
 * Vince Cable, Anna Soubry, Chuka Umunna: The EU leave campaign has dishonesty at its core – and it hasn’t convinced us - The case for staying in is quite simple: the UK is a net beneficiary in every sense. All you get from the Brexiters is conflicting narratives - 12th March
 * James Bloodworth: The cry of ‘anti-EU bias’ essentially means: agree with me or shut up - A feature of the Leave campaign has been repeated claims of bias. Such mud-flinging is often baseless, but it always has a political purpose - 9th March
 * Isabel Hardman: EU referendum: female voters will decide Britain’s future – so don’t marginalise us - Women are as concerned about the big EU issues as men. It is absurd to treat us as a niche group - 9th March
 * Suzanne Moore: The Brexit ‘cock up’ has exposed the real Boris Johnson – it’s not pretty - In the furore over plans to gag City Hall staff, the control freak who lies beneath the London mayor’s careful facade is finally being revealed - 8th March
 * Matthew d'Ancona'Ancona: The Brexiteers have star power, but no clear message - As their opponents warn of uncertainty and peril, Leavers have yet to find a strong counter-argument - 7th March
 * Tim Jonze: The Brexit campaign has divided the nation’s plonkers – so now where do I stand? - It used to be easy to work out an opinion: find out what people like Louise Mensch and Piers Morgan believe – and then think the opposite. And then the EU referendum came along … - 6th March
 * Andrew Rawnsley: My new rule for the referendum. If you’re whingeing – you’re losing - The Out campaign is spending most of its time whimpering about the other side. Could it be that they’re rattled? - 6th March
 * Steve Richards: The Tories’ divide over Europe could yet destroy the cabinet - David Cameron’s judgment is under attack from his closest colleagues. He has lit a fire that will rage well beyond the referendum - 5th March
 * Simon Jenkins: The EU referendum has given the Tories a nasty attack of the Trumps - David Cameron was meant to have detoxified his party of its Brussels plague. But the disease is back – and it’s worse than ever - 4th March
 * Martin Kettle: Cameron’s unlikely French love affair may be his saviour - The PM had all his eggs in the German basket, but finally he’s seen the mutual dependence with Paris - 3rd March
 * Deborah Orr: What do Trump and Brexiters have in common? A disregard for all but themselves - Both property billionaire Donald Trump and the UK’s Tory ‘outers’ are anti any establishment that limits them and will blame anyone who gets in their way - 2nd March
 * Jonathan Jones: What do you see in this picture? I glimpse the darkness of European fears - I can insist this is an image of heroic, defiant, brave refugees, trying to make us live up to our liberal values. But to terrified European eyes they are the other, the enemy - 2nd March
 * Hugo Dixon: The EU has its flaws – but calling it anti-democratic is falsifying reality - To suggest that Brussels engineered the downfall of governments in Italy and Greece is a distortion - 2nd March
 * Mary Creagh: Women could decide the EU referendum, and they don’t want the Dave and Boris show - Research shows women are frustrated by the discussion over Europe – and the large number of undecided female voters could keep us in the EU - 1st March
 * Polly Toynbee: If David Cameron is so smart, why is he waging war on his referendum allies? - To keep Britain in Europe, the prime minister badly needs Labour votes. Time to back off from his assault on the opposition, and at last show one-nation leadership - 1st March
 * Archie Bland: Why should Iain Duncan Smith have access to EU referendum papers? - Brexit campaigners demanding access to the other side’s game plan are being unreasonable. They need to play by the rules and get on with making their case - 1st March
 * Nicola Sturgeon: The EU isn’t just about business. That’s why I think Scotland will vote to stay - My hope is that the rest of the UK will agree that solidarity, social protection and mutual support are just as important as the economic arguments - 29th February
 * Matthew d'Ancona'Ancona: Voting Brexit to punish the PM would be self-defeating - Cameron’s big challenge is to persuade people that the 23 June should not be a referendum on his job - 28th February
 * David Mitchell: Gut instinct not heartache made Boris back Brexit - No one knows if we will be better off inside or outside the EU. The liars are those who claim to be certain - 28th February
 * Andrew Rawnsley: Why swapping partisan nastiness for olive branches would be smart - David Cameron needs support across the opposition for his In campaign. The problem is, he’s royally riled them all - 28th February
 * Kevin McKenna: Referendum tale of two Tories leaves me cold - There are the barking ones. And then there are the other lot - 27th February
 * Jonathan Freedland: The Brexit campaign is wrong: the UK is already a sovereign nation - The out campaign claims our membership of the EU prevents us from being masters of our own destiny. In fact we already have that power - 27th February
 * Natalie Nougayrède: Europe’s growing tensions show us exactly why we need the EU - From Austria to Greece, Poland and Germany, the ancient grievances behind current disputes remind us that conflict was once the most likely result - 27th February
 * Deborah Orr: We cheered Europe on as freedom swept across it – so why give up on it now? - My first visit to Germany has set me thinking about all the strides Europe has taken since the second world war, and how Britain celebrated them – and no petty political argument persuades me that we were wrong to do so - 26th February
 * Sarah Helm: Boris Johnson has just launched his latest Euro-myth - In Brussels I saw how he dealt in half-truths. With his latest political move as a Brexit campaigner, it seems we now have another - 26th February
 * Ruth Wishart: The EU referendum is already following the Scottish playbook, Project Fear 2.0 - In 2014 the government set about frightening voters about the apocalypse that would follow an end to the union – and now it’s doing the same for Europe - 26th February
 * Bridget Christie: David Cameron is under pressure. Could that be sympathy I’m feeling? - I’m not saying that, in a fleeting moment of something resembling humanity, he has cured my Tory phobia, or made me like him more than a dying rat. No - 27th February
 * Paul Mason: The Brexit debate offers a flimsy illusion of choice – we need some detail - Every party must spell out what they would do if Britain votes to leave the EU - 23rd February



THE INDEPENDENT

 * Ben Chu: How Brexit could cost jobs, cut incomes and damage the living standards of millions - If the currency does not stabilise, domestic inflation could explode, forcing the Bank of England to raise interest rates and pushing us into a recession - 24th June
 * John Lichfield: Lights out over Europe as Brexit marks the end of the European Union - The Brexit vote will encourage copycat challenges in countries such as Sweden, Denmark, the Netherlands – and even France - 24th June
 * Andrew Grice: In allowing his country to leave the EU, David Cameron has brought his career to a shuddering halt - There is little doubt that it will be a Brexiteer that succeeds Cameron as Conservative leader and Prime Minister. Boris Johnson will start as the clear front-runner, with Michael Gove tipped to become his Chancellor - 24th June
 * Matthew Norman: David Cameron will go down in history as the Prime Minister who killed his country - Whether Cameron leaves office in October with just the one broken Union to his name, or whether his folly triggers the referendum domino effect that knocks down the entire EU itself, time will tell - 24th June
 * Andrew Grice: No wonder we’re on the brink of Brexit – our politicians have never made the case for Europe - John Major tried to put Britain ‘at the heart of Europe’ but ended up declaring ‘game, set and match’ - 23rd June
 * Hamish McRae: Why I’m In: Like the British electorate, I’ll reluctantly play it safe over the European Union - The EU will have a very difficult decade ahead. Though the UK will remain on the fringe of Europe, it’s sensible to make the safer choice now - 22nd June
 * Sean O'Grady: Why I decided to vote Out of the EU while watching Euro 2016 - To understand the argument, you have to think of European national economies as if they were football teams. Each nation, within wide rules, should be able set its own strategy and tactics just the same - 22nd June
 * Matthew Norman: Why I'm In: No one will vote Remain out of love - but I want my country back - A Britain driven from the EU by phantom fears about an invasion force of millions of Turks, or seduced by a sad, atavistic Dad’s Army echo of standing defiantly alone with forces of darkness menacingly poised on the other side of the Channel? No thanks - 22nd June
 * James Moore: Baby boomers, you have already robbed your children of their future. Don't make it worse by voting for Brexit - Millennials are sometimes characterised as whiney and entitled by their whiney and entitled parents and grandparents. But they have good reason to be. They played no role in the financial crisis - 22nd June
 * John Rentoul: Ruth Davidson and Sadiq Khan were the winners of last night's BBC debate - If new viewers had started here, they would have discovered that Boris Johnson, the prime-minister-apparent, is a bit of blusterer - 22nd June
 * Ben Chu: What will happen to the financial markets if there is Brexit? - An intense burst of volatility in financial markets on Thursday night and Friday morning is more or less assured - 22nd June
 * Mary Dejevsky: If you believe the Remain camp, Putin is the bogeyman of Brexit - but it's not actually that simple - For years, the West has exaggerated Putin’s power and authority, by imposing a tsar analogy that does not fit. But in puffing him up as a threat, we serve his ends more than we serve ours - 22nd June
 * Matthew Norman: As our alternative monarch, David Beckham backing Remain could spark a constitutional crisis - For undecided voters, a choice between the gorgeous mestrosexual demigod and that guy in the purple shell suit who thinks giant lizards run the planet might prove persuasive - 22nd June
 * Tom Peck: If we vote to leave the European Union, it will be Jeremy Corbyn’s fault - This is not a new kind of politics. It is politics with the politics stripped out. It’s the politics of losing - 21st June
 * Andrew Grice: In or out, this is what will happen to the Labour party after the EU referendum - Far from avoiding another Scottish-style wipeout, some Labour MPs fear their party could be heading for a repeat in England unless they address concerns about immigration - 21st June
 * Holly Baxter: Why I’m In: I don't fear immigration or taxes, I fear that bleach-blond megalomaniac Boris Johnson - I like the idea of opting in to a positive, forward-looking community that takes – and has taken – serious steps to affect climate change, animal welfare, employment rights and humanitarian responses to global conflicts - 21st June
 * Andrew Grice: Win or lose, this is what will happen to the Tory party after the EU referendum - David Cameron's referendum was supposed to settle the EU issue for a generation. It would be ironic if it recreated the mayhem of the Major years - 21st June
 * Mary Dejevsky: Why I'm In: As a European fundamentalist, I want the protection of the EU - I consider myself part of the European generation, our lives overshadowed at one remove by our parents’ experience of war - 20th June
 * Mary Dejevsky: No, the mood of British politics did not lead to the death of a valued MP - You may not like the shouting and barracking of Prime Minister's Questions, but that is how top-level politics in this country is done - 18th June
 * Hamish McRae: The financial markets aren't afraid of Brexit – they are afraid of the incompetence of global leadership - The markets worry when European political leaders make dire warnings about Brexit, not because they believe these warnings, but because they feel this shows the leaders are frightened by change - 19th June
 * David Lister: Why I'm Out: To be against the EU is not to be against Europe - I love Europe and will continue to feel a part of it, just as many did before 1973. But we can share that closeness, and the many common objectives, while at the same time being a sovereign country - 18th June
 * John Rentoul: If Leave wins on Thursday, stand by for Boris to call an early election - If Remain wins, David Cameron would struggle to keep his EU-phobic party together. But if Leave wins, Boris Johnson could as prime minister unite the Tories with an early dash to the polls - 18th June
 * Amol Rajan: Letter from the editor-at-large: Jo Cox gave her life for democracy - Following the events of the past couple of months, and the death of Jo Cox, the very least you can do this week is head down to your local polling booth and vote - 18th June
 * Andrew Grice : There is a dark side to our politics – and Jo Cox saw it long before her death - Cox was by instinct a unifier, a bridge-builder who wanted to see a more consensual politics. But social media is taking us in the other direction - 18th June
 * Sean O'Grady: Stop blaming Brexit for Jo Cox’s death. Political violence is as old as time itself - Why are commentators implying that there's something especially corrosive, especially conducive to violent acts, about the EU referendum? - 18th June
 * Mary Dejevsky: The world is on hold over the EU referendum. Why have we failed to notice? - The one place that seems to be exempt from the perilous sense of a future unknown is the UK - 17th June
 * Mark Steel: Thanks to Brexit, Michael Gove has finally come out as an anti-austerity activist - As for Boris, he speaks the people's Latin: 'Cameron? He can do one ad infinitum mate' - 16th June
 * John Rentoul: Six reasons not to panic if Britain votes for a Brexit - Could it really be as bad as committed supporters of our membership of the European Union fear? Our Chief Political Commentator does some soothe-mongering - 16th June
 * Andreas Whittam Smith : George Osborne is trying to bully the nation into voting remain - By claiming that a post-Brexit emergency budget could include raising income tax and inheritance taxes and cutting the NHS budget, Osborne was saying to the voters who wish to leave the EU – you stupid people, you really don’t get it…well, wait and see, I will punish you - 15th June
 * Hamish McRae: Would Osborne's promised 'emergency Budget' actually materialise after Brexit? I very much doubt it - A simple look at the maths - and political logic - shows how a budget of the kind he's threatened really wouldn't make any sense - 15th June
 * Hannah Fearn: Overnight firings and no such thing as unfair dismissal: what work will really look like if we leave the European Union - The Beecroft report, which suggests employers should be able to fire their staff at will, was buried by the coalition government. If we leave the EU, the Conservatives have a blueprint for scrapping workers' rights - 15th June
 * Andrew Grice: Brexit would mean living with all of Vote Leave's broken promises - which could sweep the Tories out of power - A vote to leave the EU next week is a vote for a right-wing Boris Johnson government which would try to deliver its land of milk and honey amid economic turmoil, a recession and a £30bn black hole in the public finances - 15th June
 * Paul Beaumont: Why football violence at Euro 2016 is just another form of Brexit tribalism - Hooligan 2.0 carries a mobile phone to make sure he doesn’t miss any action, but he's driven by the same instincts that have governed humans for billions of years – and that are driving us in the EU referendum too - 15th June
 * Nick Dearden: A plea to my friends who want Lexit – this is not the time - One day we need the left needs to decide whether to make or break the EU but an exit on 23 June would represent an exit the Little Englander’s terms, not ours - 15th June
 * Charlie Cooper: Charlie Cooper]: Gordon Brown is taking the long view of European history – and that will swing the last votes - Most polls show Euroscepticism increasing with age, but the over-75s defy that trend. Could living the long 'sweep of history' make us value the path of European unity? - 13th June
 * Matthew Norman: Corbyn is the de facto leader of the EU referendum’s Meh faction - The Labour leader appears to be addicted to his irrelevance in the Brexit debate - 13th June
 * John Rentoul: If Britain votes to leave the EU, there is no turning back - In 12 days’ time, we could be living through the fallout from an unprecedented revolt against the elite - 11th June
 * Mary Dejevsky: No proper referendum debate? Come off it, Brexit is the biggest debate in British politics for decades - When senior government ministers joust in public about migration or sovereignty – we are watching the dissection of big questions that deserved open discussion long ago - 10th June
 * John Rentoul: Mea Culpa: a splash of passion fruity on your palate - Words that sound alike, clichés and redundant adjectives from this week’s Independent - 10th June
 * Mark Steel: Brexiteers love democracy – that's why they don't want you to be able to vote - Most of us feel like starting the day by fishing for herring in an area designated for those with a European license. Eventually, you can’t help but be sick of the EU telling you what to do - 9th June
 * Bobby Duffy: Wondering why Boris Johnson keeps mentioning bendy bananas and Brexit – there's a simple explanation - People are getting their facts confused about Brexit, and this might be a nifty trick being played on us all. Just look at Boris and his bananas - 9th June
 * Hamish McRae: Of course European migrants have done well out of Britain. We’d have sunk without them - While we are successful, we are a magnet for energetic people seeking a better life. The issues migration causes are first world problems – and we know how to fix them - 9th June
 * Andrew Grice : The Remain campaign has a positive story to tell on immigration. It’s time they started talking - David Cameron should devote a speech to the issue of immigration so that voters know he is listening to them. He might not convince them all, but he needs to try - 9th June
 * Matthew Norman: This is what Britain will look like in 2025 if we leave the EU - Eight years after replacing David Cameron, Boris Johnson acknowledges that no victory in democratic history has been more pyrrhic - 8th June
 * Phil Wilson: So you believed Brexit MPs when they said they were on the side of the people? Here's the truth about that claim - Leading figures of the Leave campaign are really free-market anarchists at heart who want to scrap regulation, even if it protects the rights of the people they encourage to vote their way - 8th June
 * Jim Armitage: Why are markets plunging on fear of Brexit – and should I be worried about it? - Our City Editor analyses the volatility in markets – and what that means for you and your family's finances - 7th June
 * David Siesage: The Conservatives aren't really split on Europe – the rift runs much deeper - The rejection of pragmatic centrism for ideological purity has hamstrung one of this country’s great parties, and now the other is at serious risk - 7th June
 * Charlie Cooper: David Cameron is no Europhile – and that's why his opponents tell a more convincing story - There is nothing like poverty to make you feel like you’ve lost that rare commodity – control. Michael Gove and the Leave campaign present themselves to these voters as the messengers of salvation - 6th June
 * Emma Burnell: The EU referendum has showcased the worst of politics. Calling someone 'red Tory' or 'Trot' doesn't count as debate - Blairite, Tory, Stalinist, Trot – these are all quick ways of dismissing complex political ideologies and thought processes, shoving them straight into the box you’ve already marked “wrong” - 5th June
 * Ben Chu: Exactly what sort of recession would a Brexit create? The answer matters a lot - Why does it matter? Because different policy medicine will be appropriate depending on what type of recession it is - 5th June
 * Hamish McRae: This is what the EU economy will look like in 30 years' time – and it's not a pretty picture - The problems the eurozone has imposed on itself are widely accepted. Germany apart, the entire region has made a poor recovery from the disruption of the financial crash - 4th June
 * John Rentoul: Michael Gove – or Red Mike – on the side of the downtrodden people against the EU elite - The 'Lord High Chancellor' was reborn in tonight's Sky EU programme as the Brexit warrior for socialism that Jeremy Corbyn might secretly want to be - 4th June
 * John Hilary: Jeremy Corbyn has rejected TTIP even as he campaigns to Remain – and the EU needs to listen - François Hollande and German vice-chancellor Sigmar Gabriel have also raised the possibility of abandoning the EU-US agreement altogether. So why isn't EU trade commissioner Cecilia Malmström taking notice? - 3rd June
 * Hamish McRae: Technology, not Brexit, is the biggest threat to our job market - Jobs have become a core Brexit issue. Would leaving the EU be good or bad for job creation? Why are migrants taking so many of the new jobs being created in the UK, and what are the implications for the freedom of movement for labour? What about the quality of jobs, and the implications for productivity? And so on - 2nd June
 * Mark Steel: If we vote to stay in the EU, every baby will get their own house. Isn't that what we're being told? - Meanwhile Boris Johnson claims immigration is hurting the low paid. You can understand his bitterness, as he’s suffered from low pay himself – earning just £250,000 for a newspaper column - 2nd June
 * Andrew Macleod: Leaving the EU would not boost trade with Commonwealth countries – they'd abandon us for Ireland - The Brexit campaign is ignoring a bigger threat than Paris or Frankfurt for Commonwealth trade: Dublin - 3rd June
 * Hannah Fearn: I’d give up sovereignty so my rights as a European citizen are protected - There is a common belief, particularly among those keen to leave the EU, that British society has now modernised to a point where enshrining women's and workers' rights in a European mandate is not only undesirable but unnecessary. That is a fallacy - 2nd June
 * Tom Bailey: The big names backing Remain want you to forget how so many of them pushed for Britain to join the euro - In 2001, the Financial Times predicted that Greece in particular was set to draw huge benefits from Eurozone membership - 1st June
 * John Rentoul: Opinion polls: Is this when Brexit starts to run away with it? - Our Chief Political Commentator assesses yesterday's EU referendum polls - 1st June
 * Andrew Dewson: A Brexit would break up Britain – and dismantle the Commonwealth too - The Brexit campaign has made much of its ties to the Commonwealth, particularly its richest members. But it doesn’t take a great leap of imagination to see that a break up of Britain could sever what remains of their umbilical cords - 30th May
 * Andreas Whittam Smith: After much consideration – and with a heavy heart – here's how I will vote in the EU referendum - In his final column in a three-part series, The Independent's founding editor explains how he came to make this most critical of political judgements - 27th May
 * Andreas Whittam Smith: The euro was designed to assuage French fear of German power – no wonder it failed - In the second of a three-part series, The Independent’s founding editor finds that Germany’s economic relationship with its neighbours came to define the European Union - 26th May
 * Andreas Whittam Smith: How the European Union went from war baby to problem child - Beginning a three-part series, The Independent’s founding editor Andreas Whittam Smith heads toward his EU referendum decision by looking at the union’s post-war genesis – and why Britain has always been the odd one out - 25th May
 * Mary Dejevsky: [A European army is exactly what the EU and UK needs - Whether or not Donald Trump wins the US presidency, American sentiment is for the Europeans to do much more to help themselves - 27th May
 * Andrew Grice: Having lost the argument on the economy, Vote Leave has unleashed its inner Farage - Given the scaremongering by the Outers on immigration, David Cameron and George Osborne have no choice but to spell out the economic risks of Brexit with no holds barred - 26th May
 * Thomas Baron: Vote Leave: stop offending Turkish people to further your own agenda - Vote Leave's xenophobic comments about Turkish people are misleading referendum voters by claiming that they are joining the EU, when this possibility is highly unlikely - 25th May
 * Ben Chu: Could the bookmakers predict who will win the EU referendum? - There can be wisdom in crowds – but there can also be ignorance and emotion masquerading as wisdom - 25th May
 * Daisy Benson: The EU referendum debate is still dominated by middle-aged, white men – and that must change - The media has focused almost entirely on the 'big beasts' debating European politics over their brandy and cigars, leaving female politicians to fight over such important matters as who is going to cook the chicken tikka masala - 24th May
 * Charlie Cooper: Brexit’s most prominent health expert has come out against Vote Leave’s NHS leaflet, and so should you - The Leave campaign has made a great deal of noise about the fact that the misleading figure £350m a week could be spent on the NHS if we were to leave the EU, but they seem to have got some of their facts very wrong - 23rd May
 * Hamish McRae: The EU and IMF deal over Southern Europe hangs over the Brexit debate - Five things to look out for this week in economics including the IMF-EU deal and the Marks and Spencer results, always a benchmark in judging our changing shopping habits - 23rd May
 * Flo Lewis: Restricting smokers is the last straw – to retain our liberty we must vote Leave - The question must be asked, if we allow our freedom of choice to be removed, what will follow? - 22nd May
 * John Rentoul: If David Cameron wins the referendum, will he be a vengeful conqueror or one-nation healer? - The Prime Minister knows that securing his legacy is more important than scheming to influence the choice of his successor - 21st May
 * George Gillett: If you're an internationalist, you must vote to leave the EU. Here's why - Despite its claims to global responsibility, the EU has a shameful record on international justice - 21st May
 * Charlotte Gill: Benedict Cumberbatch, what do you know when it comes to Brexit? - He joins a whole load of celebrities who have stuck their two cents into the EU debate. They only rear their heads every now and then – when something suddenly upsets them, or they spot a good PR opportunity - 21st May
 * Keith Vaz MP: Don't blame the EU for the demise of curry houses – blame the Conservatives - The crisis in Britain's curry industry could easily be solved in a stroke of Priti Patel’s pen by lowering the minimum salary requirement for chefs, but she has failed to address this vital issue and is now conveniently using the EU as a scapegoat - 21st May
 * Andrew Grice: Jeremy Corbyn could decide the EU referendum – so why isn't he trying? - With Conservative voters divided, both sides in the referendum agree that Labour supporters could swing it - 21st May
 * Mark Steel: Watching the Tories debate Brexit is like witnessing the Greek philosophers at the peak of their intellectual powers - The EU is the only thing stopping Europe returning to the Jurassic period – if we leave, within six months every house will have a stegosaurus in the garden - 20th May
 * Mary Dejevsky: EU migration rates are no problem for the UK – but you wouldn't know it by listening to the Brexiteers - One consequence of the new 'national living wage' may be not to make the UK an even more attractive destination for EU workers, but to price Britons into jobs they formerly rejected - 20th May
 * Matthew Norman: Who trusted David Cameron to tell the truth about Brexit? He's a politician, after all - Both sides in the EU referendum campaign have spouted so much screeching gibberish that no one yet to make up their mind can still be listening - 17th May
 * Charlie Cooper: Think that British politicians are morally superior to Trump? Brexit is here to prove you wrong - Brexit tactics of shock and awe are destroying British politics. We have five more weeks of the debate and politicians are already talking about Hitler - 17th May
 * Matthew Norman: Boris Johnson has reduced the EU referendum to a question of 'what would Hitler do?' - He may be proving Godwin’s Law yet again, but Boris knows Winston Churchill was once dismissed as a plummy-voiced opportunist – and when the hour of truth came, he proved his nation’s saviour - 16th May
 * Andrew Grice: Boris Johnson's blunders have damaged the Leave campaign – and his career – beyond repair - The former Mayor of London’s hapless intervention in the Brexit debate has shown his political limitations. For once, his affability cannot cover it - 13th May
 * Sophia Besch: If you’re voting for Brexit because you think British troops will be called up to an EU army, you’ve been horribly misled - It is disingenuous of Eurosceptics to present the pipedreams of ultra-federalists as plausible, let alone imminent - 11th May
 * Matthew Norman: Which terrifying nation do you suppose David Cameron thinks will go to war with us after Brexit? I have some ideas - Petrifying potential foes include Cyprus, Slovenia and the regional superpower of Malta - 11th May
 * Charlie Cooper: Why David Cameron's speech on the EU referendum showed he's the wrong man to lead the Remain campaign - David Cameron's positive defence of the EU could have been a turning point in the referendum debate. Too bad Downing Street chose to brief journalists on the single section of the speech guaranteed to produce doom-laden headlines - 9th May
 * Matthew Waterton: The no-nonsense guide to the EU debate for millennials - “I once asked Rupert Murdoch why he was so opposed to the European Union. ‘That’s easy,’ he replied. ‘When I go to Downing Street they do what I say; when I go to Brussels they take no notice.’” - 9th May
 * Will Gore: How do newspapers like ours report on the EU referendum when debate is often more rhetoric than fact? - Do we play along, reporting claim and counter-claim as they arise? Or should we refuse to report anything that we think is wrong, unfair or negative? - 9th May
 * Oliver Wright: Yes, David Cameron is scaremongering about war after Brexit – but that doesn't mean he's wrong - Pulling out of the EU would not, in itself, put Britain in jeapordy. But there is a very real risk that it could lead to a domino effect that would - 9th May
 * John Rentoul: David Cameron is not paranoid – Boris Johnson is out to get him - Even if he wins the EU referendum, the Prime Minister's position is precarious - 1st May
 * Mary Dejevsky: Has Boris Johnson blown his chances of becoming PM by backing Brexit? - He seemed like a man who lived a charmed life until he gambled on Brexit being his route to the top job - 29th April
 * Vageesh Jain: Don't listen to the Brexiteers – leaving the EU won't save the NHS, it will cripple it - Leaving the EU would barely cause a ripple in the NHS pool of debt, but it would stem the flow of millions of Euros into the UK to fund health projects and medical research - 25th April
 * Matt Ayton: Sorry Obama, your arrogance won't make me change my mind about Brexit - British interests are secondary to the visiting President. What matters to him is tailoring our situation to interests of his own citizens - 25th April
 * John Rentoul: Barack Obama on the EU referendum: I won't tell you how to vote but here's how I want you to vote - But Boris Johnson's clowning is a disservice to democracy: the British people deserve to hear a better case for Britain to leave the EU - 23rd April
 * Nash Riggins: Boris Johnson is failing to convince us that his Brexit campaign is about more than xenophobia - According to Boris, Obama's 'colonial angst' means he's plotting to destroy Britain in the cruellest way possible -  keeping us in the EU - 22nd April
 * Andrew Grice: Nigel Farage may be over but Ukip is here to stay – whether we vote to leave Europe or not - A narrow win for the In camp would not settle the Europe question or kill off Ukip, just as defeat in the Scottish independence referendum did not stop the SNP - 21st April
 * Matthew Norman: Michael Gove and Boris Johnson know that if we leave the EU, Scotland leaves us - so what's going on? - “I am praying that we will wake from this sleepwalk to tragedy; and that the Scots vote no to divorce, and yes to Britain, the greatest political union ever," Boris Johnson wrote only two years ago - 20th April
 * John Rentoul: From a points-based immigration system to secret agreements, this is what Brexit would apparently look like - After the Chancellor hit them yesterday with a £4,300-per-household bill for leaving the EU, we look at what Leave campaigners said in Westminster today and what they mean - 20th April
 * Ben Chu: These are the psychological tricks both sides of the EU debate are playing on you - and how to recognise them - What sounds worse: a shortfall of 6 per cent of GDP resulting from Brexit, or a loss of £4,300 per household? - 20th April
 * John Rentoul: Catch-Up Service: the lop-sided referendum and a genuine restaurant name - A round-up of things in case you missed them - 19th April
 * Charlie Cooper: If Vote Leave truly want a Brexit, they need a clear vision - not a smarmy rebuttal to government research - Project Outrage, as the Leave campaign is in danger of becoming, has its favourite lines: “So and so was wrong about the Euro and they’re wrong now” and “Why would the Germans/French not want to sell us cars/cheese anymore?”’ - 19th April
 * John Van Reenen: My research proves that Brexit would cut foreign investment in the UK – and that really does matter - If Britain leaves the EU the drop in investment in industries such as cars and financial services would mean a fall in income of about 3.4 per cent – that's £2,200 per household - 18th April
 * John Rentoul: If David Cameron loses the referendum, he'll go down in history as a failure - The Prime Minister needs Jeremy Corbyn to persuade Labour supporters to vote to stay in the EU, and the Labour leader made a good attempt on Thursday, but it may not be enough - 16th April
 * Matthew Turner: Sorry Jeremy Corbyn, I want you to be prime minister but I’m still going to vote to leave the EU - Corbyn’s vision for Europe is compelling, desirable and persuasive – but it's a pipedream, and he knows it - 15th April
 * Daisy Benson: Voters are estranged from politicians over the Brexit vote - The gap between those who know how they will vote in the EU referendum and the undecided is getting wider, but floating voters won't rely on MPs and the media to make up their mind for them - 13th April
 * Stephen Bush: Why the £10m pro-EU leaflet could end up being far more expensive - Leave's complaints are spectacularly disingenuous. But that probably won't matter - 7th April
 * Iain Begg: How much does membership of the EU actually cost the UK? - The Vote Leave campaign consistently leaves out the rebate we receive - but both sides are at it - 7th April
 * Matthew Norman: The EU choice is clear: let in murderers and rapists or ruin your children's lives. Thank God we've resisted hyperbole - On and on and on it goes, this wretched, witless race to the paranoid bottom - 30th March
 * Jack Straw: Why staying in Europe gives Britain more control over its destiny, not less - Does signing the UN Convention against Torture or joining the UN or NATO really undermine our ability to control our own destiny? If you take the Leave campaign’s argument to its logical conclusion, the most sovereign nation in the world is North Korea - 28th March
 * Ian Birrell: He may be absurd, but we Brits should be grateful for Nigel Farage - the far right could be so much worse - I do not want to see him anywhere near Downing Street, but Farage comes from a recognisable strand of jovial British conservatism that put the BNP out of business - 28th March
 * Ben Judah: Brussels shows that we need to be more connected to Europe, not less - London, with its expertise in fighting terror should naturally take the lead in the EU on making sure all 28 member states can fight terror like the British - 27th March
 * Kevin Maxwell: Why gay people like me shouldn't listen to Boris Johnson and his calls for us to vote to leave the EU - The EU was banning workplace discrimination against LGBT people ‘back when Boris Johnson was writing that gay marriage could lead to three men and a dog getting married’ - 25th March
 * Anthony Cary: In case you were wondering, this is the list of astonishing successes the EU really did achieve - There must be a better course than a return to the days of barbed wire and mutual suspicion - 23rd March
 * Hamish McRae: EU referendum: Why Remain will win by a mile, and why, on balance, it should - Voters will follow their hearts on 23 June, and avoid a quarrelsome journey into the unknown - 21st March
 * Ben Judah: As a new map of England shows, the Brexit vote is about the ethnic make-up of the UK - In my hundreds of street interviews, EU opposition almost always sounded something like: “We’re full” - 13th March
 * Matthew Norman: Gove is a clever man. It’s a shame about the lack of common sense - This scrape may be Michael Gove’s last as a Cabinet minister for a while - 13th March
 * John Rentoul: Brexit myths: fact-checking claims by both sides of the EU campaign - Does the Queen back Brexit? Would tariffs be charged on our exports to the EU if we left? Would I need a visa to go on holiday in Spain? We put six questions to the test - 13th March
 * Boyd Tonkin: Too much ‘balance’ can undermine fair debate and democracy - The BBC has never undertaken to give equal weight and space to reason and madness, sense and nonsense, respect and hatred - 11th March
 * Simon Kelner: The Sun was right to publish ‘Queen Backs Brexit’ story - I wouldn’t care if the Queen’s thoughts on a whole range of issues were known - it would strip away a layer of mystique around the monarchy - 10th March
 * Catherine Bearder MEP: The EU fought cosmetic tests on animals, battery hens and elephant poaching gangs. Brexit could end that - Last year the EU's crime-fighting body Europol supported the world's largest ever international operation against wildlife crime. All of this could be reversed if we leave - 10th March
 * Jessica Brown: Why should we care if the Queen backs Brexit? As Kate and Will's mishap showed, the royals are irrelevant - The Sun predicted correctly when it said in the story that the claims “will explode a furious controversy” - but nobody can really be swayed by what the monarchy might have said five years ago anymore - 10th March
 * Ben Judah: Those who call for Brexit are handing European power to Vladimir Putin. Is that what we want? - Russian propaganda is now firmly on the side of the Out campaign - and the Kremlin's aims are far scarier than the free trade economics of Michael Gove and Boris Johnson - 9th March
 * Andreas Whittam Smith: The Brexit gag is a political act – but is Boris to blame? - The discrediting of Johnson would be a great prize for those advocating that Britian should remain in the EU - 9th March
 * John Rentoul: Who could have told The Sun the Queen backed Brexit? - The Queen is reported to have told Nick Clegg she thought the EU was heading in the wrong direction. The Palace says it's 'spurious' and Clegg says he 'can't remember it'. Where could the story have come from? - 9th March
 * James Moore: One debate, two guv’nors: Carney and King can bring light instead of heat to EU vote - Outlook: Should the Governor of the Bank of England stay outside Britain’s debate over the EU? My understanding is that he didn’t intend to enter it when he appeared before the Treasury Committee. Quite the reverse - 9th March
 * Memphis Barker: EU plans over asylum applications play into the hands of Brexit campaigners - There is a significant risk to making the proposal for centralised asylum for refugees in the lead up to the EU referendum - 8th March
 * Paul Keetch: Think that if you are liberal you should vote to stay in the EU? Think again - As a former Lib Dem MP, I know that the EU we have now is not the one we fought for - 7th March
 * John Rentoul: Boris gave straight answers to questions but still managed to sound confused - The man who wants to lead us out of the EU had his chance in the Sunday swivel chair - 7th March
 * Stefano Hatfield: Andrew Marr v Boris Johnson was a dire day for journalism - In his quest to look smarter than Boris, Marr abandoned the usual rules of interviewing - 6th March
 * John Rentoul: EU referendum: Let’s hear it for a man who told the truth about a Brexit - Stuart Rose was vilified for his ‘gaffe’ about wages rising in the event of Britain leaving the EU. He should have been applauded - 6th March
 * Isabel Hardman: Why Cameron might soon regret asking his EU buddies for help - Migration is a topic Downing Street wants to avoid talking about too much before 23 June; it only benefits the Outers - 5th March
 * Remi Joseph Salisbury: ‘’Ukip is trying to get black people to vote for a Brexit by scaremongering about immigration - how ironic’’ - Woolfe's arguments hinge upon an acceptance that Black people occupy and will continue to occupy low skilled jobs in British society. They thus should be content with staying one rung above new migrants – 1st March
 * Tony Yates: Why Boris Johnson might have helped keep Britain in Europe - The London Mayor's move shocked the currency markets - and revealed gloomy evaluations of the economic impact of Brexit - 1st March
 * Steve Richards: The EU Out crowd is flamboyant, but the In team has clarity - Cameron is a powerful advocate because he knows the case and believes in it. The argument is what matters - 1st March
 * Ian Burrell: Brexit is causing an identity crisis for the British media - The media will take into account the views of their powerful owners. But they will also weigh the instincts of their audience – and that’s where some intriguing dichotomies arise - 29th February
 * Mark Steel: Is there some way we can make both sides lose the EU referendum? - The debate has become about which side will manage to be more horrible to immigrants – what an advert for humanity - 29th February
 * Liam Booth-Smith: Here’s how London could stay in the EU – even if the rest of Britain votes to leave - A new ‘city state’ tier of membership would be a novel extension of George Osborne's devolution revolution - 28th February
 * Jim Armitage: EU Referendum: Why did British bosses lose their bottle on Brexit while Boris jumped the gun? - 27th February



DAILY MAIL

 * Sebastian Shakespeare: Lady Cover-up Suzanne Heywood lands job in multi-billion Euro fund - 18th June
 * Alex Brummer: It's better to be digitally savvy in a world without boundaries than part of the dysfunctional eurozone club - 17th June
 * Stephen Glover: Cameron could scarcely have made a bigger hash of the EU vote if he'd tried - 16th June
 * Max Hastings: Despite many misgivings, I shall vote remain - 15th June
 * Quentin Letts: I shouted 'answer the bloody question' - but he would not: QUENTIN LETTS witnesses Gordon Brown in slippery form - 14th June
 * Alex Brummer: Brexit would put Britain in a better position to fully embrace the global digital economy - You sometimes get the distinct impression that leaders in Britain’s boardrooms are fighting the wrong war - 13th June
 * Dominic Lawson: Trying to terrify the elderly about their pensions? The PM must be desperate! - 13th June
 * Quentin Letts: Dave looked like a tired old dobbin off his stable nuts: QUENTIN LETTS sees a PM in dire need of a holiday - 13th June
 * Peter Hitchens: The British people have risen at last - and we're about to unleash chaos - 12th June
 * Rachel Johnson: Just stop picking on my big brother! (But, sorry Boris, I'm still voting In) - 12th June
 * Ephraim Hardcastle: PM's father in law Viscount Astor claims a Brexit win in the referendum won't be accepted by Parliament - 10th June
 * Peter Oborne:  I admire him, but with these rancid attacks on Brexit, John Major has stooped lower than any former PM - Major is known to blame the disloyalty of the Conservative Right-wing, and Eurosceptics opposed to his support for the 1992 Maastricht Treaty for wrecking his entire premiership - 8th June
 * Andrew Pierce: Does the EU really need its FIVE presidents? - 6th June
 * Dominic Lawson: Spare us the views of the petulant Dalek who plunged us into Black Wednesday! - 6th June
 * Quentin Letts: Battle for the very soul of Britain - The debate has all been about economics and borders - 4th June
 * Alex Brummer: The German iron fist is smashing Europe apart: Merkel's brutal treatment of Greece means a peaceful and prosperous EU is a pipe dream - 3rd June
 * Craig Brown: Eh-Oh! Now Dipsy says vote Leave...  - 31st May
 * Alex Brummer: Dysfunctional eurozone is bitterly divided - with prosperous Germany dominating the jobless economies of the Mediterranean - 30th May
 * Dominic Lawson: The sick joke is Dave called the referendum to help party unity! - My personal insight into the way the EU referendum has introduced acid into the bloodstream of the Conservative Party came at a drinks event last week - 30th May
 * Quentin Letts: Staying is 'more safer' said Khan, maestro of grammarl - 27th May
 * Richard Littlejohn: Will their vile skinhead poster tip the see-saw against Remain? Take notice of this patronising, manipulative and scary advert... and then Vote Leave - 26th May
 * Katie Hopkins: It's bad enough spending tax-payers' money to encourage black people to vote but telling them HOW to vote is outrageous - 26th May
 * Max Hastings: It's an unholy mess - but here's why I'm voting to stay in the EU - 26th May
 * Quentin Letts: Project Fear becomes Project Dear Oh Dear: - 25th May
 * Ephraim Hardcastle: David Cameron's giving his former director of strategy the silent treatment over Brexit support - 25th May
 * Katie Hopkins: I thought Boris was going to save Britain from the EU, instead he has turned out to be a big fat fraud - 24th May
 * Dominic Sandbrook: When the cynical scares turn out to be bunkum we'll despise the elite more than ever - 24th May
 * Alex Brummer: We've heard this doom-mongering nonsense before...and last time, when we were told leaving the ERM would spark disaster, our exit began a golden economic age - 23rd May
 * Katie Hopkins: The Left can’t stand it but all over Europe and America politicians are on the rise who put their own countries and culture first. But who will put Britain first? - 23rd May
 * Quentin Letts: Sir Cover-up and Cameron practically share pyjamas - 20th May
 * Katie Hopkins: Forget cooking with Auntie, the BBC's outrageous propaganda day for Angelina and the Remain campaign is the real recipe for disaster - 17th May
 * Richard Littlejohn: Balls and Cable? Osborne really is scraping the barrel: The electorate kicked them out in 2015, so why does the Chancellor think voters will take any notice of what they say about the EU - 17th May
 * Liz Jones: A twinkle, a frisson, a seductive promise...and I'm won over! - 15th May
 * Dominic Sandbrook: The biggest lie of all: The PM says Brexit could lead to war, but the truth is Europe's more riven with hatred than at any time since 1945 because of the EU - 14th May
 * Alex Brummer: If the EU referendum is a choice between recession or being dictated to by far-Right crackpots, I'll take recession - It is enough to make you want to leave the country, not just the EU. The Prime Minister thinks Brexit could lead us into another war - 13th May
 * Quentin Letts: Pasties! Asparagus! Beer! BoJo had his nose in everything - 12th May
 * Quentin Letts: Old Corbyn chuntered on glumly in the drizzle - 11th May
 * Richard Littlejohn: Beware the invasion of the toxic caterpillars! David Cameron's absurd Brexit scare stories are insulting the intelligence of voters - 10th May
 * Quentin Letts: The day Dave went all Victor Meldrew - 10th May
 * Chris Deerin: If immigration is the best argument Out can muster, we will stay in the EU - 9th May
 * Stephen Glover: Boris has many flaws - but he's been proved right on the EU's diesel stitch-up - 28th April
 * Alex Brummer: EU campaign has turned Osborne from UK economy's biggest cheerleader into its chief gloomster - 28th April
 * Quentin Letts: Off with his head! Paterson invokes spirit of the Civil War: QUENTIN LETTS on a no nonsense case for Brexit - 26th April
 * Ephraim Hardcastle: Still more fanciable at 50 than rivals half her age, Actress Elizabeth Hurley has entered the EU debate - 26th April
 * Craig Brown: Vote Brexit to save the Great British Banger: CRAIG BROWN imagines the next seven days of the referendum debate - 26th April
 * Alex Brummer: Shocking unemployment, feeble growth and the never-ending Greek debt crisis.... Euroland isn't working - 26th April
 * Stephen Glover: Why is Obama telling us to give up on OUR sovereignty when he'd never surrender a drop of his own? - 21st April
 * Richard Littlejohn: Why I'd rather live under Labour than stay in the EU with a pro-Brussels Tory puppet in Number 10 - Try to imagine you’re a lifelong Labour voter. Then ask yourself what’s more important: getting rid of the Tories or staying in the EU? - 19th April
 * Richard Littlejohn: Hello, Mr Little can we rely on your vote? No: Richard Littlejohn imagines receiving an unsolicited call aimed at persuading voters to remain in the EU - 15th April
 * Alex Brummer: The IMF and World Bank unite against Brexit - but should they really be meddling in Britain's political process? - 15th April
 * Quentin Letts: Cameron's £9million pro-EU mailshot stinks. So I'm sending mine straight back! - Received your pro-EU propaganda leaflet in the post yet? As you may have heard, the Government is blowing millions of pounds on a public mailshot - 13th April
 * Alex Brummer: Never mind the Brexit gloom merchants - the prospects for the City look as bright as ever - Among the weakest of the arguments deployed by the ‘remain’ campaign is to suggest that if Britain were outside the comfort zone of the EU inward investment would freeze over, we would be cut off to global commerce and UK plc would postpone corporate investment - 29th March
 * Andrew Pierce: It pays these lords to be EU cheerleaders - Whenever you hear blustering peers Lord (Neil) Kinnock and Lord (Chris) Patten scaremonger about Brexit, you should bear in mind their juicy Brussels pensions depend on them flying the flag for the European superstate - 28th March
 * Ephraim Hardcastle: Desert Island Discs to feature shoe repair boss and his views of a Brexit - Sunday's edition of Desert Island Discs carries a pusillanimous warning from the BBC that the guest, shoe repair chain boss John Timpson, will express Brexit views - 25th March
 * Quentin Letts: Blusterer sagged at first - but was soon buffing back - watches Bojo demolish the mumbling Europhiles - 24th March
 * Katie Hopkins: To hell with #solidarity. If Europe is willing to accept that Muslim terror is simply the new normal we can't afford to stay part of it - So that's it then, is it? - We lit up the Eiffel Tower, the Brandenburg Gate and the Trevi Fountain in the colours of the Belgian flag - 24th March
 * Alex Brummer: Sterling has had its worst three months since the financial crisis - so will Brexit hurt the pound further? - 24th March
 * Robert Hardman: Forget Brexit, this is a union of nations the Queen would never want to leave behind - why the Commonwealth is still close to the monarch's heart - 15th March
 * Richard Littlejohn: Please back Remain, Blair. Then we can all Leave: - If Tony bangs the drum for his beloved EU then it could be the greatest service he has ever done for Britain - 15th March
 * Peter Hitchens: Here's the entire EU debate in 9 words: Do you want to be a servant of Brussels? - 13th March
 * Stephen Glover: I'd be amazed if the Queen wasn't Eurosceptic - and good for her if she had a pop at Cleggie - We cannot be sure what the Queen thinks about all manner of things, but we may take it for granted that she is a fierce patriot and British Unionist who has given her life to the service of this country - 10th March
 * Alex Brummer: Mark Carney in the line of fire over Brexit - Mark Carney’s Brexit appearance before the Treasury Select Committee was a high voltage affair with the Eurosceptic tendency fearful that the Bank of England has been taken over by a gang of traitors - 9th March
 * Isabel Oakeshott: Two brushes with disaster and why Dave has unleashed the No10 attack dogs - Once upon a time, David Cameron was quite keen on the idea of referendums - 8th March
 * Andrew Pierce: PM's shadowy hitman and the phone call that ended the career of pro-Brexit business chief - As John Longworth rose to make his speech to the annual conference of the British Chambers of Commerce last Thursday, there was an unusually high level of interest in Downing Street in what he had to say - 8th March
 * Peter Oborne and Richard Heller: The question isn’t why we should listen to a spiv like Mandelson on the EU, it’s why the Parliamentary authorities aren’t investigating his very dubious affairs - It’s almost six years since Peter Mandelson departed from public life after a political career which saw him resigning twice from the Cabinet in disgrace and acquiring a well-deserved reputation as master of the dark arts - 7th March
 * Peter Oborne: Chilling witch hunt against free speech that drove out pro-Brexit business chief John Longworth - Generally, there are two types of spokesman for the business world... - 7th March
 * Dominic Lawson: Would Churchill have surrendered our sovereignty to the EU? Never! - Ghosts are haunting the debate on whether the UK should stay in or leave the European Union - 7th March
 * Quentin Letts: Marr dragged him down a fiendish alley of details - Quentin Letts sees Boris clash with the grand interrupter - 7th March
 * Ruth Sunderland: Ousted business chief John Longworth is a hero who didn't hide his contempt for those in power - Having endured a five-day cycle ride through a region of India famed for its wild tigers, John Longworth should have been well-prepared for this mauling by desperate pro-EU propagandists - 6th March
 * Nicholas Soames and Peter Mandelson: Why we're joining forces to stay IN our grandfathers' giant footsteps - on why Britain must remain strong in Europe - 6th March
 * Ephraim Hardcastle: The Queen could give prime minister a hard time over Cabinet Secretary's decision to deny anti-EU ministers access to government papers - Cabinet Office bigwig Jeremy 'Sir Cover-Up' Heywood's decision to deny anti-EU ministers access to government papers must intrigue the Queen - 4th March
 * Katie Hopkins: They've finally given us a vote on Europe just in time to see it collapse. So, whoever 'wins', we need to prepare for the chaos that comes after - Can you hear all that babble? Brexit this and Grassroots that. Undecided about staying. Unsure what might happen if we leave - 3rd March
 * Richard Littlejohn: If Britain votes to remain, we're all toast - The Boys in the Bubble have turned the EU referendum into a navel-gazing political drama about the future of the Conservative Party - 1st March
 * Dominic Lawson: Operation Fear? It's more like Operation Pull The Other One - 29th February
 * Peter Hitchens: The EU is our own Hotel California: We can check out, but we'll never leave - I’m sorry to break this to you but it looks as if we’ll have to endure not one but two EU referendum campaigns - 28th February
 * Black Dog: Michael plays the fall guy... - Brexit-backing Michael Gove’s nimble manoeuvrings in favour of quitting the EU contrast with the Justice Secretary’s reputation for being about as physically co-ordinated as a day-old giraffe on ice - 28th February
 * Rachel Johnson: How Boris went for Brexit over tennis - Mayor's sister... tells the inside story of how he agonised over decision and texted PM after sharing a bottle of wine - 27th February
 * Quentin Letts: Plop, plop, plop came the cliches from Philip's dull mind: Hammond's monotonous case to stay in the EU - 26th February
 * Sarah Vine: The torture of watching my husband choose between his beliefs and his old friend the PM - Daily Mail columnist Sarah Vine's intensely personal account of a momentous decision - 24th February

see also EU referendum news and polls from in and out campaigns



DAILY EXPRESS

 * Peter Hill: David Cameron is to blame if Britain leaves EU - 14th June
 * Leo McKinstry: With just one leap we could finally be free of the EU - The anger of the British public at the European Union has sent a wave of panic through the establishment - 13th June
 * Nick Ferrari: Leaders fear real EU debate - At first glance it would probably have seemed impossible - 12th June
 * Macer Hall: Europhiles plot counter-attack - Will the politicians listen when the people speak? Chatter around Westminster suggests some MPs are already preparing to close their ears to the EU referendum verdict - 11th June
 * Frederick Forsyth: Trust Northerners to vote FOR Britain in the EU referendum - OF course it is only a gut feeling, and not being of the Remain campaign I would not dream of elevating a mere suspicion to a claimed established fact - 10th June
 * Leo McKinstry: There is nothing complicated about Brexit, it's really VERY simple - THE Remain campaign is a gigantic exercise in fear and deceit - 9th June
 * Fergus Kelly: Remain camp are patronising the older generation - Only two weeks to go to the big EU vote and the oldies are getting it in the neck - 8th June
 * Frederick Forsyth: Simply, do you want control of your UK? - So far both the must-stay-in and Brexit campaigns seem to have been making a dog’s breakfast of their attempts to swing a commanding popular opinion to their cause - 3rd June
 * Leo McKinstry: Slowly but surely the Brexiteers are gaining ground - Political experts have had a dismal recent record in forecasting events] - 2nd June
 * Fergus Kelly: EU referendum is changing the British political panorama - It was while I was watching David Cameron share a platform with the new Labour Mayor of London Sadiq Khan that I realised, whatever the outcome of this month’s EU referendum, nothing is ever going to be the same again in politics - 1st June
 * Patrick O'Flynn: EU referendum notebook: The 'biased' postal vote guide was NOT an innocent mistake - People are rightly concerned and even outraged by the biased guide to postal voting sent out with ballot papers in the Bristol area and elsewhere - 1st June
 * Peter Hill: Migration crisis is nothing less than biggest mass movement in history - Europe's migration crisis is nothing less than the biggest mass movement of populations in history, according to the UN - 31st May
 * Leo McKinstry: The referendum has damaged the PM’s credibility - David Cameron won the Conservative leadership in 2005 on a surge of optimism - 30th May
 * Macer Hall: Out camp must keep up fight - They think it’s all over. As the month that brings the EU referendum is about to begin, a feeling that the result is a foregone conclusion is spreading in both camps - 28th May
 * Jennifer Selway: What is the PM’s real view of the EU - It is make-your-mind-up time on the EU referendum. Well almost. And it can’t come soon enough - 28th May
 * Frederick Forsyth: Germany’s economic miracle is nearly over - 27th May
 * Leo McKinstry: Immigration is the key issue in referendum debate - SHORTLY before he retired from his last premiership in 1955 Winston Churchill told a magazine editor that “immigration is the most important subject facing this country but I cannot get any of my ministers to take any notice” - 26th May
 * Patrick O'Flynn: Mark Carney still has a lot to answer for... - WHY has nobody asked Mark Carney - who seems to be readily available for media interview at the moment - whether he has conducted a relative impact assessment for the UK - 25th May
 * Ann Widdecombe: Base the important EU decision on the facts - I am becoming tired of the Brexit debate and there are still weeks to go - 25th May
 * Peter Hill: Does anyone really know what will happen if Britain leave the EU - 24th May
 * Leo McKinstry: This man is proof we are a nation in moral decline - Cynical, deluded and unpatriotic, pro-EU campaigners are always eager to extol the supposed virtues of mass immigration. But the reality is very different - 23rd May
 * Nick Ferrari: Wild Brexit claim shows PM’s fear - In a campaign that has been astonishingly long on ludicrous claims and hyperbole and agonisingly short on facts and detail it was always going to be interesting as to just who would be prepared to make the most outlandish suggestion - 22nd May
 * Macer Hall: Project Fear is damaging the PMs authority - David Cameron heads east to an island hideaway in one of Japan’s most stunning national parks next week - 21st May
 * Fergus Kelly: Did Boris touch a nerve with Hitler comment? - What a gathering up of skirts, sucking in of cheeks and general fit of the vapours greeted Boris Johnson’s comparison of the EU’s ultimate aim of unifying Europe with a previous plan to do so by Adolf Hitler - 18th May
 * Ann Widdecombe: The BBC is showing its bias over Brexit - The BBC seems to have celebrated the renewal of its right to be funded by licence with an outbreak of bad behaviour - 18th May
 * Leo McKinstry: Farage is the best man to take on Cameron - The choice facing the British electorate in the EU referendum could hardly be more simple. Do we want to be an independent, democratic nation once more, with control of our own economy, justice, welfare, laws and borders? Or do we want to become a regional province of a German-led federation, ruled over by an unelected, unaccountable oligarchy? - 16th May
 * Martin Townsend: Desperate Dave claims there will be 'a war' if we leave EU - It had seemed inevitable for some weeks that the mounting panic engulfing the Remain campaign’s so-called Project Fear would result in its main cheerleader coming out with something preposterous - 15th May
 * Frederick Forsyth: Angela Merkel's mistakes are the BIGGEST threat to Britain - The Germans seldom do this. They are usually too careful, too methodical, too organised - 13th May
 * Fergus Kelly: Will Brexit really bring all of these horrors? - Is there any horror that won’t be visited upon this country if Britain has the temerity to vote to leave the EU next month? - 11th May
 * Leo McKinstry: Scots threaten to block English freedom from the EU - The creation of the Scottish Parliament in 1999 was meant to douse the flames of nationalism north of the border but it has achieved the very opposite - 2nd May
 * Frederick Forsyth: Obama’s EU lecture is an insult to Britain - Three decades ago I stood for a while at the edge of a graveyard in a small town in Pennsylvania. It was called Gettysburg - 29th April
 * Patrick O'Flynn: Obama’s trade deal is no good for Britain or our NHS - A few weeks back, David Cameron stood grinning when French president Francois Hollande preposterously threatened to transfer the Jungle migrant camp from Calais to Kent if Britain left the EU - 26th April
 * Peter Hill: The EU trade deal doesn’t matter a hill of beans - The Remain camp think the referendum is done and dusted now that President Obama has played what they believe to be the trump card in the scare campaign, and they might be right except for two key points - 26th April
 * Leo McKinstry: If we don’t leave, Brussels will take revenge on the UK - Defeatism is the hallmark of the Remain campaigners - 25th April
 * Camilla Tominey: Michael Gove is a big hit in Euro fight - If I was one of Michael Gove’s advisers, I’d have Spandau Ballet’s Gold playing every time he walked into a room, like a boxer heading for the ring - 24th April
 * Macer Hall: EU vote has David Cameron feeling jittery - David Cameron is fast learning the truth of the old saying that when times are rough you find out who your real friends are - 23rd April
 * Leo McKinstry: EU’s meddling is part of its bid to take over Europe - The European Union would have us believe that an era of humility and honesty has arrived in Brussels - 21st April
 * Patrick O'Flynn: A 'British Option' means our country can regain control once again - According to the Remain campaign, outside the European Union our country would have to replicate a relationship already adopted by some other country - 20th April
 * Fergus Kelly: Italy, EU referendum, John Whittingdale and attacking ISIS with comedy - 20th April
 * Frederick Forsyth: What does the PM think he is doing? - Oh dear, oh dear, what does our young Prime Minister think he is doing? - 15th April
 * Patrick O'Flynn: Britain is more than just a star on someone else's flag - In Shakespeare's time "the love that dare not speak its name" was a reference to homosexuality - 14th April
 * Leo McKinstry: Now the pro-EU lobby wants a ban on referendums - After the recent glut of scare stories about the risks of leaving the EU support for Brexit is on the rise - 14th April
 * Patrick O'Flynn: David Miliband failed to comprehend downsides of our EU membership - David Miliband once said he thought that the EU needed a president who would "stop the traffic" in global capitals - 13th April
 * Peter Hill: ‘Abuse of power’ Chuck the Government’s £9million propaganda leaflets straight in the bin - Leave supporters are jumping up and down over the Government spending more than £9million of taxpayers’ money to distribute leaflets setting out the case for remaining in the EU - 13th April
 * Leo McKinstry: Cameron is a liability and has become a huge boost for Brexit - David Cameron was meant to be the greatest asset of the proEU cause in the run-up to June's referendum. But now, as his premiership is engulfed by turmoil over his financial affairs, he is fast becoming the campaign's biggest liability - 11th April
 * Nick Ferrari: EU referendum leaflet is a misuse of our money - 11th April
 * Frederick Forsyth: Politicians need to put Britain first - Gloom spreads as it gets harder and harder to save our steel industry. Let us not forget that steel is not just a commodity but a vital strategic asset - 8th April
 * Patrick O'Flynn: ''Cameron spending £10m on Brussels leaflets is a sign of weakness - David Cameron is very badly rattled and short-term survival has taken over in his mind from long-term strategic thinking - 8th April
 * Leo McKinstry: Words of wisdom from Lord Owen on NHS and Brexit - SUPPORT for the NHS is one of the few political issues that unites the electorate - 7th April
 * Patrick O'Flynn: Steel crisis is example of how democracy is being hollowed out - The grave crisis hitting the steel industry has brought forward a torrent of public concern for those who work in it, particularly in Port Talbot, South Wales - 4th April
 * Patrick O'Flynn: Leave campaign has the strongest arguments for Britain's future - We are now within 90 days of the referendum and according to the political betting markets, the Remain campaign is still more than 60 per cent likely to prevail - 29th March
 * Macer Hall: Cameron needs to change course on Brexit campaign - Relaxing in the Canary Islands sun this Easter, David Cameron has a much-needed chance to ponder his next move - 26th March
 * Leo McKinstry: Appeasement and sentimentality will not defeat jihadis - In its endless fearmongering about the dangers of Brexit the Remain campaign peddles the line that Britain’s membership of the European Union “makes us safer” - 24th March
 * Frederick Forsyth: Brits won’t accept unfair referendum - A strange people, we Brits - 18th March
 * Ann Widdecombe: Here’s why I back Brexit - As readers of this column will know, for some time I have been undecided on my vote in the referendum, wanting to come out but unconvinced that anybody has any sort of plan for doing so and that includes the most vocal advocates of leaving the EU - 16th March
 * Macer Hall: Prime Minister’s power starting to fade already - David Cameron once compared five-year terms in Downing Street to Shredded Wheat - 13th March
 * Patrick O'Flynn: Brussels and Turkey agreement could have HUGE implications - It is ironic the Remain campaign (AKA 'Project Fear') is already renown for scare stories, because by far the most genuinely frightening prospect in view for Britain by far is a consequence of staying in the EU - 10th March
 * Frederick Forsyth: The EU was never meant to be a democracy - A long time ago a very wise old man advised me thus: “If ever you are confronted by a highly complex situation and a decision cannot be avoided, never rush to an early emotional judgment - 10th March
 * Patrick O'Flynn: EU referendum notebook: Why big companies want us to stay and why they are Wrong - A Few weeks ago many people noted an encouraging trend for the Leave side in the EU referendum - 8th March
 * Leo McKinstry: John Longworth's suspension is disgraceful - Throughout its miserable, destructive history the European Union has shown contempt for democracy and debate - 7th March
 * Sir John Mills: Brexit has Labour members confused - I've been a loyal Labour Party member for over 50 years and this is the first time I’ve seen so many supporters disagree with party policy so strongly as on the EU - 6th March
 * Patrick O'Flynn: EU referendum notebook: British trade will be fine if we vote Brexit and this is why - I wrote the other day about the importance of countering the "Project Fear" claims that our jobs and trade would be decimated by leaving the EU - 3rd march
 * Leo McKinstry: We have no reason to believe what politicians tell us - Another day, another bout of lurid scaremongering from the Remain camp - 3rd March
 * Nick Ferrari: Stop the bullying, Dave'' - So much for the good clean fight promised by the Prime Minister, then - 28th February
 * John Whittingdale: I have nothing but respect and admiration for the Prime Minister and consider it a privilege to serve in his Government - 28th February
 * Crossbencher: Bets on Boris to back Brexit may have come from insider knowledge - It has been suggested that there may have been some insider knowledge among those who placed bets on Boris to back Brexit - 28th February
 * Richard Kemp: Brexit would strengthen national security - All the arguments in favour of leaving the EU, defence and security are the most clear cut - 28th February
 * Stuart Winter: Birds of a feather will stick together whatever happens with the EU vote - HOSE iconic birds we regard as traditionally British will continue to need their European “passports” whatever the outcome of a certain referendum this summer - 28th February
 * Macer Hall: Tories heading for a civil war - David Cameron is fast learning the lesson from history that civil wars are often the most brutal of conflicts - 27th February
 * Frederick Forsyth: Let’s judge the EU by past experience'' - So, the Cameronian camel has duly gone into labour and produced the utterly foreseeable gnat - 26th February



THE SUN

 * Andrew Green, Daniel Hannan and Patrick Minford: Why voting to leave the EU will save our sovereignty, rein in migration and boost our economy - 14th June
 * James Forsyth: PM must heed The Godfather over ill-judged hatred of Boris Johnson - Remain campaign's anger over BoJo as 'face of Brexit' could backfire badly - 11th June
 * John Mann: ‘It’s time to break free from the EU and take back control of our lives’ - Senior Labour MP urges working class voters to lead UK to Brexit - 9th June
 * Rod Liddle: Win or lose, the game’s up Dave… EU referendum mess means we’re witnessing end of the PM - Senior Labour MP urges working class voters to lead UK to Brexit - 9th June
 * Kelvin Mackenzie: [I smell a Brexit win … Dave doesn’t listen to the little guy and certainly can’t speak for him - 6th June
 * James Forsyth: Immigration helps Out campaign go on the attack - This was the week that the EU referendum became a proper contest - 4th June
 * Trevor Kavanagh: Uncontrolled mass immigration is a social disaster - Sun columnist says the Government's failure to keep migration under control is a dereliction of its duty to guard our borders - 30th May
 * Tony Parsons: Moronic Remain poster is offensive to both black AND white people - 'This is the politics of the sewer....‘I have never seen such puerile racist trash in my life. It is shockingly, unapologetically prejudiced...’ - 28th May
 * Kelvin Mackenzie: Why insult whites to get black votes? What if it was the other way round? - Sun columnist is disgusted by racist Saatchi & Saatchi referendum ad campaign - 27th May
 * Rod Liddle: Stick two fingers up to EU president Junker...who thinks democracy can’t be left to the people - ‘Posh dullard’ shuts out countries who elect governments he doesn’t agree with - 26th May
 * Jane Moore: Should I stay or should I go? I’m still waiting for a decent EU referendum debate to begin - Sun columnist says that neither side of the EU debate is striking the right note - 25th May
 * Paul Goodman: Our cleaner Edith said 41 years ago that we ought to quit Europe ... and she’s still right - 24th May
 * Trevor Kavanagh: Three key reasons why we MUST all vote Out on June 23 - We only have four weeks left to avoid making a Titanic mistake for the future of the UK - 23rd May
 * James Forsyth: Tories’ big two in scrap that could kill both beasts - Boris and Cameron’s ‘personal’ battle is harming both of them and putting the Tory Party on course for a ‘hiding to nothing’ - 21st May
 * Tony Parsons: Leave it out, pampered snobby twits...the EU doesn’t work so stop with ‘Project SNEER’ - Sun columnist says pro-EU campaign is turning into a juvenile joke - 20th May
 * Kelvin Mackenzie: Don’t reshuffle cabinet, Cam...just shuffle off - Kelvin Mackenzie discusses the state of the Government should Cameron get his way in Brexit outcome - 20th May
 * Trevor Kavanagh: IMF scaremongering shows EU fear domino effect of Brexit - Sun columnist says a Leave vote would almost certainly trigger a firestorm of similar breakaway calls - 16th May
 * James Forsyth: David Cameron’s plans caught in EU referendum crossfire - PM will have tough time getting back to business after Brexit vote - 14th May
 * Rod Liddle: Public won’t buy Prime Minister’s rabid zombie monkey spin on European Union - Scaremongering around Brexit and referendum won’t help - 12th May
 * David Owen: Could anything be more ridiculous? Brits must give Churchill's two fingers to Cameron's WW3 EU threats - The moment for the British people to define their character for the 21st century came when our Prime Minister David Cameron invoked the threat of World War Three - 11th May
 * Trevor Kavanagh: David Cameron is right to be wary of EU Ronnies... it could well be goodnight from PM - David Cameron should be worried now Boris can focus fully on the Brexit bandwagon - 9th May
 * Trevor Kavanagh: The end is nigh for Cam’s Project Fear as poll shows Brexit camp are winning - Downing Street nerves will be jangling today over the Sun poll showing Brexit leading eight weeks before Referendum Day - 2nd May
 * Kelvin MacKenzie: Michael Gove has pushed Prime Minister David Cameron towards Out... of No10 - PM is losing his grip on power whichever way the Brexit vote goes - 29th April
 * Trevor Kavanagh: Barack-ing of Boris Johnson is a big boost for Brexit - Sun columnist says No10’s reaction to BoJo’s Obama blast bordered on the hysterical - 25th April
 * Priti Patel: Let’s take back control of how our taxes are spent and vote OUT of the EU - The Employment Minister says she supports our proud nation of entrepreneurs and small businesses - 24th April
 * James Forsyth: Obama intervention helps EU In campaign scent victory - Obama intervention helps EU In campaign scent victory - 23rd April
 * Trevor Kavanagh: With Project Fear in full flight, the Brexit ‘catastrophe’ is a Hitler-style Big Lie - 18th April
 * Tony Parsons: We’ll quit Europe because Leavers simply care more, and the vote won't even be close - The polls put the Leave and Remain sides neck and neck, but I strongly suspect the UK will choose to quit the European Union because one side cares far more than the other side - 17th April
 * James Forsyth: Boris Johnson V Barack Obama set to give Brexit a massive boost - US President to jet into UK to offer birthday wishes to Her Maj - and make case for Bremain - 16th April
 * Trevor Kavanagh: Be angry over ‘In’ campaign’s £9m mailshot on your tab, not Cameron’s offshore cash - Britain is heading for an age of pointless transparency - 11th April
 * Trevor Kavanagh: EU fans Cameron needs don’t care enough about vote and are more likely to go to the pub - Sun columnist says that our money is still being sprayed at undeserving causes - 4th April
 * Dominic Raab: EU is an ‘intelligence colander’ and Brexit will stop terror leaking into UK - MP Dominic Raab says that the EU is stripping the UK of proper control over our borders - 31st March
 * James Forsyth: EU obsession is sapping all of David Cameron’s energy - Sun Columnist says the PM is entirely focused on Brexit, to the UK’s detriment - 26th March
 * Trevor Kavanagh: Copycat terrorist attack in the UK will push us to Brexit - For David Cameron and pro-EU campaigners there is only one thing worse than a terrorist bomb in Brussels - and that is a copycat attack in the UK before June 23 - 24th March
 * Trevor Kavanagh: Eur head is in cloud cuckoo land, Jeremy - Sun columnist says Clarkson’s pro-EU arguments are borderline bonkers - 15th March
 * Kelvin MacKenzie: Queen’s Brexit advisers are orf their heads - In light of the fallout from the Brexit revelation, isn’t it time Buckingham Palace got media savvy? - 14th March
 * Tony Parsons: Turkey joining the EU is reason enough for us to get out - Sun on Sunday columnist says when Turkey joins the EU we will be choosing to move next door to the millions of psychopaths in Syria, Iraq and Iran who wish us nothing but harm - 13th March
 * James Forsyth: EU storm will make Budget a damp squib - George Osborne will play it safe with the Budget as he has little room for manoeuvre due to the referendum - 12th March
 * Rod Liddle: Migrant crisis is bad but the EU just made it even worse - Sun columnist says plan is ‘gravest threat to the west of Europe since the end of WW2’ - 10th March
 * Trevor Kavanagh: 'The Queen’s only human and, like all of us, has opinions'' - Sun columnist says we shouldn’t be surprised if the Palace complaint was written by No10 - 10th March
 * Trevor Kavanagh: Telly Boris Johnson got lost in a cloud of Brexit waffle - Sun columnist slams politician’s appearance on BBC’s Andrew Marr show - 7th March
 * James Forsyth: If the Out cause is to win, Boris must see off David Cameron - Sun columnist reckons BoJo must raise his game to the level of the PM - 5th March
 * Trevor Kavanagh: Cameron’s EU scare scam is blown apart in one week - European Union is chaos with member states exposed as criminally incompetent - 29th February
 * David Owen: David Cameron is to blame for leadership battle - Former Labour Minister David Owen says PM has to abandon Project Fear if he wants to keep holding the reins of power - 28th February
 * Tony Parsons: Staying in EU is no guarantee of safety... ask Paris - Sun on Sunday columnist reckons only reason the Govt wants to stay in Eurozone is fear - 28th February
 * James Forsyth: David Cameron needs a clean fight or any victory party will be lonely - The PM is stung by the number of Tories who have come out for Out - 27th February



DAILY MIRROR

 * Kevin Maguire: EU referendum Leave campaigners dishonestly shifting the blame for problems of their own making - 12th June
 * Carole Malone: David Cameron bends the rules over EU referendum to suit his own agenda - 11th June
 * Nigel Nelson: Britain would have to accept MORE migrants if we made Norway style treaty after exit - The so called Norway model shows the downside of Leave is accepting any European migrant who wants to come in - 11th June
 * John Prescott: Vote Leave in the EU referendum and you'll get an even more dangerous Tory Government - 11th June
 * Kevin Maguire: Don't believe con man Boris Johnson's £350m porkie - he's just sticking two fingers at British voters - Mirror columnist Kevin Maguire says Boris couldn't be trusted to run a parish council, never mind be PM after the EU referendum ITV debate - 9th June
 * Kevin Maguire: Tory Brexit boys shamelessly feigning concern for common people in their grab for power - Mirror columnist Kevin Maguire says Michael Gove and Boris Johnson posing as champions of the workers is the most laughably sickening moment of the referendum campaign - 5th June
 * Carole Malone: EU laws mean we have to kick out decent migrants and allow wrong sort to stay - Mirror columnist wants people to vote to leave the EU so Britain can decide who settles here - 4th June
 * John Prescott: We must Remain in the EU but we have to stay true to Labour values - Mirror columnist John Prescott has praised Jeremy Corbyn for making a strong speech on the future of the EU - 4th June
 * Nigel Nelson: David Cameron could do with a Major lesson on Brexit from Sir John - David Cameron's EU campaign is putting Nigel Nelson's teeth on edge. The Sunday People political editor turns to his dentist for help - 4th June
 * Kevin Maguire: Don't believe the Leave campaign's lies - they're just two fingers up to the public - Boris Johnson is claiming the UK sends £350million to Brussels on the side of his Leave battle bus - 29th May
 * Carole Malone: EU referendum Remain camp are treating us like fools and we should Leave - Mirror columnist Carole Malone believes Britain would be better voting to Leave the EU on June 23 - 28th May
 * John Prescott: Labour are wrong to join forces with the Tory enemy during the EU referendum - Mirror columnist and former Deputy PM John Prescott says Labour should win the EU referendum without working with the Tories - 28th May
 * Kevin Maguire: Party in-fighting means the Tories are best ignored when it comes to the EU referendum - 22nd May
 * John Prescott: Demonising refugees to boost the Brexit campaign is scandalous - 21st May
 * Kevin Maguire: EU referendum Remain campaign on attack while Leave firmly on the defensive - Nigel Farage may regret attacking diversity with a month to go until the vote, says Kevin Maguire - 17th May
 * Carole Malone: The Government's lies on immigration will push more people towards Brexit - The Government claimed immigration figures were much smaller than they actually were - potentially harming the Remain campaign - 14th May
 * Nigel Nelson: Brexit fears will add £115 to the average family holiday, claims report from Bank of England - The pound has been falling against the Euro since November, losing nine per cent of its value - 14th May
 * Brian Reade: Brexit debate has descended to a battle of which politician can talk the most bull - The referendum campaign has produced nonsense from both sides, from IDS’s sudden concern for the poor to David Cameron’s scaremongering - 13th May
 * Gordon Brown: Gordon Brown says 'we need to lead Europe, not leave it - just ask Leicester City' - Writing exclusively for the Mirror, the former Prime Minister lays out his case for why we should vote to remain in the EU on June 23 - 10th May
 * Nigel Nelson: Boris Johnson and Michael Gove have been branded 'enemies of working people' - Deputy Labour leader Tom Watson and former leader Neil Kinnock slammed the two Tory ministers' motivation for leaving the EU - 1st May
 * John Prescott: Britain is better in EU - but we need to focus on the special relationships that really matter - John Prescott says the question he is asked most lately is whether he will be voting to remain in the EU - 1st May
 * Kevin Maguire: Boris Johnson is the UK's Donald Trump - on two flat tyres - Perhaps we shouldn’t be surprised Johnson stupidly asserted America’s first black President hates Britain because his father was from Kenya - 25th April
 * Carole Malone: How dare Barack Obama tell the British people we must stay in the EU - The U.S President has urged Britons to vote to remain in the EU so we're not shoved to the back of the queue for trade deals - 23rd April
 * Nigel Nelson: Winston Churchill’s vision was for European unity – he even wanted to merge Britain and France - History would have been very different if the iconic PM’s wartime plan to create a single cross-Channel country had borne fruit - 17th April
 * Kevin Maguire: Labour and unions must now lead over Britain's EU membership - The TUC and its biggest trade unions will be firmly in the Remain camp when Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn rallies supporters - 10th April
 * Carole Malone: We must stop dodgy David Cameron trying to buy EU referendum result he wants - David Cameron is using our money to sway the EU vote - 9th April
 * Kevin Maguire: What the cowardly Brexit brigade really want is to axe your rights at work - Mirror columnist Kevin Maguire says the EU is far from perfect but without it, employers would be given free rein to ride roughshod over workers - 3rd April
 * Carole Malone: Brussels terror attacks show staying in the EU is more dangerous than leaving - Experts have claimed our borders would be more secure if we left the EU - 27th March
 * Nigel Nelson: Iain Duncan Smith hates Europe and loathes George Osborne – that's why he flounced off - The former Worker and Pensions Secretary claimed he can no longer stomach disability cuts but in truth he’ll do anything to bring about Brexitv- 20th March
 * Carole Malone: Carole Malone on why whoever leaked the Queen's thoughts on the EU should be knighted - The Queen's thoughts on the EU have been leaked, with some claiming it was "treason" to reveal our monarch's private opinions - 13th March
 * Carole Malone: 'Turning Britain from democracy into dictatorship: Hounding out of business chief reveals dirty tricks of EU 'Remain' campaign'' - Carole Malone says the hounding of British Chamber of Commerce director general John Longworth show how pro-EU campaign is acting like a dictatorship - 8th March
 * Carole Malone: Britain is strong enough to survive without Europe - it's our politicians who are weak - Carole Malone doesn't believe David Cameron's claims that we would be lost without Europe - 6th March
 * Carole Malone: Britain is a dictatorship under Cameron after EU referendum 'bullying campaign' - The Prime Minister promised the public that there would an honest debate on the EU, but has let us down - 28th February



WALL STREET JOURNAL

 * Simon Nixon: Bracing for the Turmoil of a Potential Brexit - A vote for leaving the EU would pose profound political, diplomatic and economic challenges for the U.K. - 12th June
 * Simon Nixon: Brexit: Free Movement of People Means Free Movement of Jobs—to the U.K. - It no longer makes sense to talk of British jobs but European jobs that happen to be located in the U.K. - 8th June
 * Simon Nixon: Armed With Statistics, David Cameron Struggles to Win Hearts in Brexit Debate - The ‘Remain’ campaign hasn’t developed a convincing narrative of why the EU exists - 5th June
 * Simon Nixon: Britain’s Innovators Need an Integrated Europe - U.K. companies stand to gain as EU works to improve regulation and extend single market - 1st June
 * Simon Nixon: EU’s Migration Woes Threaten a Crisis of European Values - The transformation of Europe’s political landscape is putting a shared understanding of those values under strain - 8th May
 * Simon Nixon: Eurozone Recovery Belies Eurosceptic Myths - Recent data suggest recovery in the common-currency area is possible - 4th May
 * Simon Nixon: Cameron Needs More Than a Close Win on Brexit - Only a decisive victory would settle the question of the U.K.’s European destiny and give the prime minister a strong mandate to rebuild trust with the rest of the EU - 1st May
 * Simon Nixon: Where Post-Brexit U.K. Would Stand in the Trade-Deal Queue - Any pact with the U.S would be far less ambitious than the proposed EU-U.S. trans-Atlantic accord - 28th April
 * Simon Nixon: Britain Would Pay High Price for ‘Liberating’ Europe - Proponents of U.K.’s exit are misreading its true costs - 20th April
 * Simon Nixon: If left unresolved, Greece’s latest standoff with its creditors over its bailout program threatens to reach boiling point just as Britons go to vote in June - Greek Risk Hangs Over British Vote on EU
 * Simon Nixon: Obama’s Diplomatic Mission to Britain Gets Tougher - The ‘Brexit’ campaign’s success so far partly reflects David Cameron’s political failure - 10th April
 * Simon Nixon: Brexit May Be Bigger Risk for Eurozone Than U.K. - European markets may not remain so calm if polls continue to narrow - 7th April
 * Simon Nixon: Ireland’s Modern Rising Springs From its Membership in the EU - For most Irish, their European destiny is unquestioned, even as their influential neighbor, the U.K., contemplates an EU exit - 27th March
 * Simon Nixon: Germany Doubts a British Divorce Would Be Amicable - Berlin doesn’t share the confidence of Boris Johnson, the mayor of London, about how easy it will be to deliver a mutually satisfactory trade deal after a British exit from the European Union - 24th March
 * Simon Nixon: In Brexit Debate, U.K.’s Lack of Influence in EU is Greatly Exaggerated - Simply counting up times the U.K. was outvoted tells us nothing useful about Britain’s sway in the bloc - 17th March
 * Simon Nixon: Brexit Would Make U.K. Trade Less Free - Britain’s membership in the EU gives the country leverage it wouldn’t find standing alone - 2nd March
 * Simon Nixon: U.K. Euroskeptics Under Pressure to Offer Alternate Vision for Europe - Those willing to risk setting off the EU’s disintegration need to say what should replace it - 28th February