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British Politics Gives a Sense of Government by Old School Chums

The New York Times Original article ›
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This article on the main protagonists in the Conservative Party during the EU referendum in Britain shows how the narrow interests of a few Oxford educated politicians and their infighting has shaped the vote on Brexit. Gove, the Justice Secretary and Boris Johnson, former Mayor of London, have no idea what to do if they won in the Brexit vote. Both pull out of the leadership race after prime minister Cameron announces his planned resignation following a leadership vote in the party. Cameron and Osborne, the other two Oxford educated politicians, are caught up in the infighting in the Conservative Party which leads to Britain voting to leave the European Union. The article looks at the lives of the four male politicians who form an old boys club at one time and now are deeply divided with Cameron's wife Samantha and Gove's wife Sarah Vine once close friends, now along with their husbands no longer talking to each other. Also evident here is that Sarah Vine writing in the Daily Mail discloses more grief about all this messing up her social life than the way the vote to leave the EU will eventually affect the country's standing, its credit rating, and the economy, and how it affects the lives of ordinary British people.


Politics in Britain's Conservative Party and Brexit in 2016- Osborne, Cameron Johnson and Gove

07/08/2016

Astonishing as it may sound all four Conservative Party leaders went to Oxford, some are saying that they represent the close inner circle type of politics which is disconnected from the people of Britain, especially people marginalized in today's economy.

Grouped Articles

British Politics Gives a Sense of Government by Old School Chums

The New York Times 07/07/2016

Poll: Brexit vote boosts support for EU in Germany | News | DW.COM | 08.07.2016

DW.COM 07/08/2016

Theresa May and Andrea Leadsom vie to become Britain’s next prime minister

The Economist 07/07/2016

Theresa May Is Poised to Be Britain’s Next Prime Minister

The New York Times 07/11/2016

Opinion: Mother Leadsom's big mistake | Opinion | DW.COM | 11.07.2016

DW.COM 07/11/2016

Theresa May, Untested and Ascending to Manage ‘Brexit’

The New York Times 07/12/2016


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