Rees-Mogg asks her during PMQs earlier today if it is true that the contrary will be the case.
An ominous calm reigned and one half expected the Prime Minister to choose a hymn to match.
Ireland risks a hard border, imposed on it by the rest of the EU, if a way isn’t found by all parties of climbing off the self-contradictory backstop clauses.
She also says there must be an option to extend transition; that it can’t be indefinite, and that Northern Ireland business must have full access to the UK.
The Brexit secretary admits it wasn’t his idea, however, and that we’d have to “know how we get out of it”.
Blair’s former communications director claims it’s the “right wing of the Conservative Party” who are “pushing hardest for this Brexit now”.
But the Scottish Conservative leader cannot shed any light in her new book on the atrocious abuse directed against women on social media.
There is “hard work ahead” and “there will be more difficult moments, but the Prime Minister claims she is “convinced we will secure a good deal”.
“There is still the question of the Northern Irish backstop, but I believe everyone around the table wants to get a deal.”
It was once said that the secret of Thatcher’s success was moving steadily on multiple fronts so that her enemies did not know where to focus their attention.
I was glad to see the Prime Minister and the Education Secretary doing so recently – particularly now that Rayner is clear she will scrap the programme.
“The Irish certainly won’t. The British certainly won’t. So unless the EU Army plans to march in and build it, surely it can never happen?”
The British Government has repeatedly and recently confirmed that abortion law has long been a devolved matter, and it should stay that way.