Business for Britain

Business for Britain
TypesAdvocacy group
LocationMillbank Tower
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Outcome
Bloomberg speech Jan 2013
Referendum Bill blockedJan 2014
European Parliament election May 2014
2015 general election May 2015
Renegotiation begins Jun 2015
Referendum Act passed Dec 2015
Renegotiation concluded Feb 2016
Referendum held Jun 2016
David Cameron resigns as PM Jul 2016
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Meaningful votes Jan–Mar 2019
Brexit delayed until 12 April Mar 2019
Cooper–Letwin Act passed Apr 2019
Brexit delayed until 31 October Apr 2019
European Parliament election May 2019
Theresa May resigns as PM Jul 2019
Boris Johnson becomes PM Jul 2019
Prorogation and annulment Aug–Sep 2019
Benn Act passed Sep 2019
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Agreement Act passed Jan 2020
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Implementation period begins Jan 2020
UK–EU trade deal agreed Dec 2020
Future Relationship Act passed Dec 2020
Scottish Continuity Act passed Dec 2020
Implementation period ends Dec 2020
New EU–UK relationship begins Jan 2021
UK–EU trade deal ratified Apr 2021
Windsor Framework released Feb 2023
Windsor framework adopted Mar 2023
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Business for Britain was a eurosceptic campaign group which sought a renegotiation of the relationship between the United Kingdom (UK) and the European Union (EU). The campaign was founded in April 2013 by Matthew Elliott.[1]

History

The company was founded by Matthew Elliott who had founded the TaxPayers' Alliance in 2004.[2] Elliott served as the chief executive of the organisation.[3]

The group published research on the voting record of the UK in the European Parliament in 2014, called Measuring Britain's influence in the Council of Ministers. It cited 55 times that the UK government had rejected a proposal which then went on to be passed by the EU Council. The fact-checking organisation Full Fact felt that this did not show a full picture as often proposals are rejected before being presented to the Council and that there was research to show that a majority of decisions were taken before a vote in the Council.[4] In November 2014, they published a letter signed by more than 500 business leaders which called for a referendum on the UK's membership of the EU.[5] In June 2015, the Business for Britain Board agreed to form Vote Leave.[1]

Publications

  • Measuring Britain's influence in the Council of Ministers (2014) PDF

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Elliott, Matthew (27 September 2016). "How Business for Britain helped change the course of history in three short years". Brexit Central.
  2. ^ "Matthew Elliott". The Guardian.
  3. ^ "About us". Business for Britain. Archived from the original on 26 April 2013.
  4. ^ O'Leary, Joseph (22 June 2016). "How often does the EU overrule British ministers?". Full Fact. Retrieved 25 June 2016.
  5. ^ Marlow, Ben (8 November 2014). "Business leaders demand cross-party pledge on EU vote". The Telegraph.
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