And how does the Mayor of London respond? With this: "Five years on from Brexit, London remains a European city, where European Londoners are valued and cherished. You are our neighbours, colleagues, friends and loved ones. Thank you for making London your home. You are wanted here — and always will be."
London Mayor Sadiq Khan has launched into a European love-in with a fresh anti-Brexit message on the fifth anniversary of leaving the EU. Writing on social media this morning, Khan declared that "London is European" - and "European Londoners are valued and cherished".
Brexit: Majority of Londoners back rejoining the European Union, new poll findings suggest - 68% of Londoners also say Brexit has been more of a failure, with 9% describing it as more of a success
While the Vote Leave bus famously promised extra cash for the NHS, five years on 52 per cent of Britons think Brexit has been bad for the health service, compared to only 6 per cent who think it has brought improvement.
Today marks five years since Britain's exit from the EU - and Brits are not thrilled about how it's turned out. Here The Mirror looks at some of the negative impacts of Brexit
As a result of the changes, WSTA expects the price of a bottle of strong red wine with an alcohol content of 14.5 percent to increase by 54 pence. Taking into account the previous duty hikes introduced in August 2023, duty will have increased by 98p in just 18 months.
The first phase of Britain's new border model requiring additional certification for some goods came into force at the end of January last year. A second phase followed at the end of April, introducing physical checks at ports for products such as meat, fish, cheese, eggs, dairy products and some cut flowers. New charges were also introduced.
These polling numbers are startling, and what's more, even leave voters are now reversing their support for Brexit.
Brexit forced the border question back onto the agenda, but the sense of crisis that once drove these conversations has started to dissipate
Growth in the firm's under-offer pipeline was 'partly driven by first time buyer activity ahead of increased Stamp Duty rates from April 2025', Foxtons said.