The group wants a Hard Brexit. Either way, the Government should move Article 50 before next spring is over.
Advice to the Government’s transitional team.
Some Remainers would love us to get bogged down, but a rapid and clean break with the EU is the only next step which is in the national interest.
It would take longer than the off-the-shelf EEA model, and might involve more short-term disruption, but we would regain more control.
Remain is trying to bully you out of doing what you want to do.
It’s time for Vote Leave to stop putting this progress in danger.
The final post in this series on how the Prime Minister’s aim of a reformed Europe, claimed by him as the basis for a Remain vote, was not achieved by his renegotiation.
To what problem is the EU a solution? The question is yet to be satisfactorily answered.
If life outside the EU is so bad, why do the Swiss and the Norwegians strongly oppose joining?
Do people find sovereignty in a Parliament they regrettably take little interest in – or in actual power and the pound in their pocket: their job; their standard of living?
It is a grand delusion that, right after walking out of the EU, our former partners would be bound to give us a better deal than we have now, with none of the cost.
Much of the debate will focus on jobs and prosperity. These are certainly important factors to bear in mind. But there is another more fundamental issue at stake here.
We need a new law to defend the vulnerable victims of sex trafficking.
The europhiles never seem to tire of setting up straw men and celebrating their ability to knock them down.
Our Nordic partners favour free trade, reject federalism and want to protect non-Eurozone members.