I understand the Government’s keenness to achieve a free trade agreement with the EU, but we need to be careful that the price is not too high.
I have said previously that I believe the Government has been pursuing a sensible negotiating approach to date. I maintain that view.
By reminding us that the EU status quo isn’t on the table, Juncker has done us a favour. Now May must set out her own stall.
When I worked in Number Ten, the people who grasped most clearly this ideology’s threat were my Muslim co-workers.
From Spain to Italy to America, parties of organised labour are in trouble. The blue collar base didn’t come out for them – and may not come out for Corbyn either.
The established parties have lost their grip on this contest, but their hold on other parts of the country’s system remains strong.
Politicians like Geert Wilders who want to ban the Quran and who treat all Muslims as “the enemy within” are doing ISIS’s work for them.
With growing problems at home, many member states are at odds with the Commission’s punitive line on Brexit.
He is a talented populist and looks set to do well in next week’s Dutch election. The question is what he will do then.
“We hope that it abides by the Minsk agreements, curbs the reckless military activity, and ditches the misinformation.”
Quietly, public support for getting on with delivering Leave will continue to swell.
Are the fundamental tenets of freedom – that of association, expression, and worship – being maintained to their fullest extent? Some would say not.
Are we seeing a convulsion as great as 1968 – or even 1848?
The referendum vote was ostensibly against a trade deal, but it wasn’t really about it at all.
The key to a good Brexit is empowering UK entrepreneurs to talk to their European counterparts and become ambassadors for Downing Street’s plan.