Brexit & Beyond
Individual Contributors to Policy Commons
Chris Grey is Emeritus Professor of Organization Studies at Royal Holloway, University of London, and was previously a Professor at Cambridge University and Warwick University. He is a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences (FAcSS). He originally studied Economics and Politics at Manchester University, where he also gained a PhD on the regulation of financial services. "Best guy to follow on Brexit for intelligent analysis" Annette Dittert, ARD German TV. "Consistently outstanding analysis of Brexit" Jonathan Dimbleby. "The best writer on Brexit" Chris Lockwood, Europe Editor, The Economist. "A must-read for anyone following Brexit" David Allen Green, FT. "The doyen of Brexit commentators" Chris Johns, Irish Times. @ChrisGrey@mastodon.online & Twitter @chrisgreybrexit
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I blog in a personal capacity and all views expressed are mine, not those of any institution or organization.
Individual Contributors to Policy Commons · 20 December 2019 English
The first week of Johnson’s new administration has seen both speculation about, and the beginning of some answers to, how he intends to undertake Brexit. The outrageousness of that situation …
Individual Contributors to Policy Commons · 15 December 2019 English
In my previous post, the morning after the election, I discussed what the result is likely to mean for what follows with Brexit. Even in the short time since then …
Individual Contributors to Policy Commons · 13 December 2019 English
Today is a bitter moment for those of us who think that Brexit is an unmitigated disaster. Even if it were not for Brexit, the prospect of a country run …
Individual Contributors to Policy Commons · 6 December 2019 English
As the election campaign enters its final days my warning at the outset that, despite this being an election defined by Brexit, there would be no substantive discussion of Brexit …
Individual Contributors to Policy Commons · 29 November 2019 English
Whilst the outcome of the election remains unpredictable, there is a clear dividing line between the scenario in which there is a Tory majority and all other scenarios. If there …
Individual Contributors to Policy Commons · 22 November 2019 English
As regards Brexit, at least, this week’s televised Leaders’ Debatelived up to its billing in every respect apart from the lack of any meaningful debate and the total absence of …
Individual Contributors to Policy Commons · 15 November 2019 English
As strongly foreshadowed in last week’s post, Nigel Farage did indeed retreat on his threatto stand a Brexit Party (BXP) candidate in every seat unless Boris Johnson shifted to a …
Individual Contributors to Policy Commons · 8 November 2019 English
As prefigured in my previous post, this election campaign looks set to avoid any serious discussion of Brexit. That is actually quite extraordinary. We have a country whose politics and …
Individual Contributors to Policy Commons · 30 October 2019 English
Since my previous post, the ‘do or die’ deadline of 31 October has been abandoned without any doing or dying, or any national ‘explosion’, in prospect. The EU have granted …
Individual Contributors to Policy Commons · 25 October 2019 English
I had half-expected that today I would be writing that, to all intents and purposes, Brexit was now a fait accompli and that if not on 31 October then very …
Individual Contributors to Policy Commons · 19 October 2019 English
The latest parliamentary dramas can seem perplexingly arcane or, alternatively, as the ‘Super Saturday’ terminology suggests, like some kind of sports tournament. The latter trivialises that the future of country …
Individual Contributors to Policy Commons · 17 October 2019 English
Apart from grotesque pointlessness of the Queen’s Speech and the understandable, but also pointless, proliferation of predictions and counter-predictions about the Brexit negotiations, the guiding theme of this week has …
Individual Contributors to Policy Commons · 11 October 2019 English
Like most people I was taken by surprise when yesterday’s meeting between Boris Johnson and Leo Varadkar ended with a positive-sounding line about being able to “see a pathway to …
Individual Contributors to Policy Commons · 5 October 2019 English
Amidst the latest complex and fast-moving events of the Brexit crisis, there is an underlying theme in this week’s developments. Many of the lies, fantasies and misleading claims that have …
Individual Contributors to Policy Commons · 27 September 2019 English
In my previous post I wrote of the political thunder and lightning that we were about to experience, and this week we have had the beginnings of that storm. There …
Individual Contributors to Policy Commons · 20 September 2019 English
This week Brexit, like parliament, seems to have been in a state of suspension. That might seem like a welcome lull after the drama of the last couple of weeks. …
Individual Contributors to Policy Commons · 13 September 2019 English
At various times over the last three years I, like some other commentators on Brexit, have used the terms ‘Jacobin’ and ‘McCarthyite’ to describe some pronounced tendencies of one extreme …
Individual Contributors to Policy Commons · 6 September 2019 English
British politics is now in total disarray and daily, almost hourly, descending into ever-deeper chaos. Amid all the prediction of the economic damage that the Brexit vote would cause – …
Individual Contributors to Policy Commons · 30 August 2019 English
The events surrounding Brexit are now whirling out of control, and taking Britain to an unknown, but certainly dangerous, destination. It’s worth briefly summarising how shocking the current situation is. …
Individual Contributors to Policy Commons · 9 August 2019 English
Considering the fact that August is usually a quiet month for politics, there’s still plenty going on and although it’s normally considered ‘silly season’ much of it has deadly serious …