Brexit, the salty bill arrived on the divorce, on the grating in May

Established Brexit's divorce bill, about 50 billion, stock markets react with caution while the pound begins to fly.

In England, however, dissensions begin against Theresa May's Tory government, which is destined to come under fire from both pro-EU and Eurosceptics. Among the first, Tom Brake, head of the Brexit dossier for LibDems, immediately makes himself heard, according to which "45 billion pounds will be the price that the country will have to pay because of the ministers (brexiteers) Johnson and Gove and their illusory vision of a new post-Brexit British Empire.

Words echoed by several Labor MPs, against the background of the first "urgent" interpellations against the government to the Municipalities, or the messages of Open Britain, a combative platform that gathers supporters of 'Remain' defeated in the referendum in June 2016.

The summary of Jonathan Freedland, liberal commentator for the Guardian, is that in the end it will be "an unforgivable waste of public money" for the Kingdom. Consideration that, for opposite reasons, the former Eurosceptic leader of UKip Nigel Farage also makes, defining "a completely unacceptable sale" the payment of "a sum of this amount in exchange for nothing but a promise without guarantees of a future decent solution on commercial relations. “I have always said that no agreement was better than a bad agreement, invoking the abandonment of the negotiation. This Farage says is a bad agreement: indeed, it is not even an agreement.

Brexit, the salty bill arrived on the divorce, on the grating in May

| Economy, MONDO, PRP Channel |