The Government must try to build from the essentials out – security, legal certainty, frictionless trade. Zero tariffs would be the icing on the cake.
You may well hear grumbling from businesses about the levy which will help to fund them – but the effort will be worth it.
“Another woman Prime Minister sent a task force halfway across the world to protect another small group of British people against another Spanish-speaking country.”
Here are five reasons why you, we and all concerned should keep a cool head.
Her book is full of laugh-out-loud moments. And it has important points to make about violence, trolling and discrimination.
The Government’s opponents face a choice between cobbling together a rearguard vehicle for the negotiations or adapting to what comes next.
The current method that we use to assess employment support is fundamentally flawed, and should be overhauled.
There is much more to politics than an affordable state and competitive taxes. But both will be indispensible for survival, let alone prosperity, after we leave the EU.
The uncomfortable question is this: has the push for expansion altered the nature of these institutions? If not, why do they tolerate jaw-dropping illiberality?
We persist in chasing the symptoms of problems in Iraq, rather than trying to work out the root causes – thus aiding the growth of Iranian power.
Just as Remain voters and others prize Single Market access, so Leave ones will be watching for the referendum result to be honoured.
It was a British invention. But it makes no sense to subject ourselves to its rules once we have left the EU.
Is it truly necessary to keep reciting these arguments? Sadly, yes – in each generation some people are drawn to brutal ideologies.
We are keen to gather views from interested parties (such as businesses, industry groups, politicians, academics and others) about what would happen.