Lord Ashcroft: “If they leave, it’s the beginning of the end.“ The view of Brexit from Stockholm and Riga
“The UK is fighting for its citizens and rights. If every country was doing that it wouldn’t be possible to negotiate anything!”
“The UK is fighting for its citizens and rights. If every country was doing that it wouldn’t be possible to negotiate anything!”
Plus: Montgomerie’s legacy. This referendum is a pathetic attempt to hoodwink the British people. Two LibDems in a room at the same time. And: I meet Alex James, not Alex James.
Unfortunately for him, the not inconsiderable facts of the law, the French Government and the English Channel undermined the claim.
The new leadership’s ideas look like the first sketches of a manifesto that’s more Socialist Worker than New Labour.
The Chair of Conservatives for Reform in Europe replies to Paul Goodman’s article of last week arguing the opposite.
If I am to vote to remain in the EU I need a lot more than a bit of tinkering around the edges by a Prime Minister who should be leading rather than following.
It has the capacity to ensure that the UK gets the best of both worlds.
Part Two in our mini-series concludes that the choice is between a possible wrangle over free movement if we leave and the certainty of more uncontrolled migration if we don’t.
She says that the Commission’s proposals form “the basis for a deal”.
As we enter a crucial month, a grim choice faces Conservative Eurosceptics.
The proposal is “a sick joke”.
“I was very clear what I meant yesterday, which was to say that Labour have an open-door migration policy. They don’t think that there’s any limit on the number of people we should let in.”
Plus: The turnaround success story of Ebbsfleet Academy. And: the Cecil Parkinson I knew.
“The only people they never stand up for are the British people and hardworking taxpayers.”
France’s Prime Minister says: “Europe has forgotten that borders are required…Schengen may die.”