We can bring the withdrawal phase to a close. And can then get on with thinking about how to, and who should, negotiate the future relationship.
Also during Prime Minister’s Questions, Chris Philp called for social media firms to share their data with the police, and to face legislation if they refuse to comply.
There is a strong case for altering the balance of welfare spending between working people and those retired.
Flawed, of dubious judgement, and late to the fight. But if he’s the only big beast willing to challenge anti-semitism, at least it’s better than nothing.
There are some brilliant MPs, who go above and beyond. But the majority have hardly covered themselves in glory over Brexit.
The Employment Minister embodies two reasons why the Government is still afloat – its jobs creation record and under-reported Ministerial loyalty.
Meanwhile Julian Knight asks if the Birmingham bin strike is a warning of what the nation will face under “a hard-left Labour Government”.
The Prime Minister lives to fight another day, and with a bit of help from Labour she could still get her deal through.
The words of Gordon Brown to Tony Blair echo in our ears. “There is nothing that you could say to me now that I could ever believe”.
It rarely worked for the Conservatives when they tried to out-UKIP UKIP.
The new group’s platform is not very inspiring. But its biggest problem is it they won’t be very different from the Conservatives’.
Bower writes him off as a loser, which is perhaps what he will end up being. But he did much better at the last general election than the commentariat expected.
He’s a Brownite of Brownites with a Leave-voting seat – and one of Corbyn’s main critics. Which explains why he’s going and what he’s doing.