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At the time of its BBC One launch, the Brexitcast podcast had been downloaded over eight million times, and the Financial Times reported that it regularly topped both the weekly podcast and iTunes charts, particularly editions recorded after significant events in the Brexit process. [3]
The cost of Brexit is still being determined, but the government watchdog estimates that the economy will take a 15 per cent hit to trade in the long term, while experts suggest that the UK has ...
He focused on EU politics and particularly Brexit, establishing the podcast Brexitcast with political correspondent Chris Mason, political editor Laura Kuenssberg and Europe editor Katya Adler. [ 5 ] [ 4 ] He began presenting Newscast after Brexitcast came to an end, and was replaced as Brussels correspondent by Nick Beake in summer 2020. [ 6 ]
Calvin John Robinson (born 29 October 1985) is a British continuing Anglican cleric, political commentator, writer and broadcaster. Since 2024, he has been a priest in the Anglican Catholic Church; from 2022 until his priestly ordination in 2023, he had been a deacon in the Free Church of England, a conservative Anglican realignment denomination, then until 2024 a priest in the Nordic Catholic ...
THE INDEPENDENT VIEW: Even before Donald Trump’s election victory, the outlook for this week’s global summit in Baku was bleak - but it presents an opportunity for the UK to take charge
The fact MPs are voting on whether to delay Brexit doesn’t necessarily mean it’s any more likely Brexit will be stopped. Theresa May today caved into mounting pressure and announced that ...
The decision to relaunch the podcast came in January 2020, when it was announced that Brexitcast would be renamed Newscast after the United Kingdom's exit from the European Union on 31 January. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The final edition of Brexitcast was released on 1 February 2020, [ 3 ] with the first edition of Newscast airing on 6 February.
In the London Review of Books, Ian Jack declared that it was, as of 2017, "the fullest and most reliable account of the [Brexit referendum] campaign". [2] In The Guardian, William Hutton called it "excellent", observing that "there seems to be no one to whom (Shipman) hasn't spoken and whose motives he does not pretty accurately portray and understand."