Members of Congress – and the Wall Street Journal – already see the opportunity for a productive free trade deal with the UK.
Triumphalism would not only be unfair to David Cameron, one of the most electorally successful Tory election winners of modern times. It would also be deeply wrong.
When someone invites you to the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, you don’t say no. Here’s what happened – including Rachel Whetstone backing Leave.
Almost sixty per cent believe we’ll vote Remain, despite almost exactly as many being definite Leave voters themselves.
Young doctors have been wickedly misled by the BMA to break the Hippocratic Oath – although one in five has had the bravery to cross the picket lines.
If I didn’t work full-time in politics, I wouldn’t know that this Police Commissioner poll is taking place.
The Westminster Village gets overwrought about the politics of America and overwhelmed by the glamour of its presidency.
The Conservative leadership hopeful is struggling to seem prime ministerial.
“He will know that our relationship with the US, and particularly our intelligence-sharing, is being chipped away at by rules coming out of Europe.”
He sets out his Brexit view.
“What’s good enough for the United States is good enough for the United Kingdom.”
If he really means what he says about trade, it follows that to him we are of no intrinsic value to America except as part of an EU federal superstate.
Their joint press conference will take place later today.
They should aim to minimise contrasts with this popular man, and highlight how far removed the Remain campaign is from ‘hope and change’.
Plus: Whinging republicans. Useless Corbyn. McDonnell v McDonald’s. And: the imperishable wisdom of William Gladstone.
When someone invites you to the White House Correspondents’ Dinner, you don’t say no. Here’s what happened – including Rachel Whetstone backing Leave.