LONDON (Reuters) - An anti-Brexit campaign bus was forced into a reversal of its own on Wednesday as it got stuck in a narrow side-street in central London during its first day on the road.
Nigel Farage reportedly refused to get off his Brexit Party bus today because people gathered around it were carrying milkshakes. It comes days after the party leader was covered in a caramel shake ...
The double-decker bus found itself at the centre of a media storm in June, after it was emblazoned with a poster which claimed that by leaving the EU £350m a week would be freed up to spend on the ...
British far-right politician Nigel Farage was reportedly stuck aboard his touring Brexit bus briefly on Wednesday after several protesters carrying milkshakes appeared nearby, apparently planning to ...
Alexandra Phillips, a member of the Brexit Party and member of European Parliament, joins Morning Joe to discuss the latest in Brexit.Sept. 30, 2019 ...
It has been five years since Brexit “got done” – and voters and politicians alike are still counting the cost. Britons voted to leave the European Union by 52 per cent to 48 per cent in 2016, in a ...
Nigel Farage was apparently trapped on a bus after people surrounded the vehicle and threatened to pelt the Brexit Party leader with milkshakes. Earlier this week, a protester struck Farage with a ...
There are a lot of numbers involved when one enters into a conversation about Brexit. Who could forget the now infamous Brexit bus and its stark warnings that the £350m Britain paid per week to the ...
The iconic red bus emblazoned with political messaging is making a comeback in Britain. Unlike the kind made popular by the Leave campaign during the 2016 Brexit referendum, however, this new bus will ...
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