He says it was improper to by-pass Davis’ White Paper version. He doesn’t support Tommy Robinson. And he apologises for confusing Pope Urban IV with Pope Urban VI.
We are re-proving that ‘we learn from history that we do not learn from history’.
We shouldn’t be glued as a vassal state to a declining European market.
And, late in the day, the Prime Minister bows to our advice, and rushes on to Marr, today, to make the case for her new proposals.
British politicians are negotiating as if it were 410 AD, and still the Roman province of Britannia, asking permission to leave instead of flourishing a mandate to do so.
The Prime Minister once promised that: “We are not leaving only to return to the jurisdiction of the European Court of Justice. That’s not going to happen.”
The twenty-first century Division will have more strings to its bow than simply armoured vehicles, strike brigades, and air assault capabilities.
As a split in the Conservative Party finally threatens for real, May must explain why and when she backed off mutual recognition.
UK courts will no longer be able to appeal to the ECJ, and the UK Supreme Court will be the highest legal authority in the land.
Ministers and others are mulling whether checks already in place across the Irish Sea could be extended.
The good news is that there is an enormous opportunity for the Party – because it is much worse at converting people considering voting Blue into actual voters.