Downing Street has spent the summer months diligently working through the mathematics of how to eat up as much time as possible.
Many of our proposals can be introduced quickly. Some might take 12 – 15 months. We don’t believe anything will take longer than two to three years.
MPs are more likely to try other means of stopping a No Deal Brexit than holding a no confidence vote in Johnson’s Government.
Ministers are wary of giving rebels the chance to introduce troublesome amendments. Some workarounds and bypasses contain their own problems.
If Boris Johnson wants to pursue a No Deal exit, then he will have a fight on his hands with MPs.
She says that over the past few months she has become “increasingly uncomfortable” with the rhetoric surrounding Brexit.
Those preparing to block No Deal should add our final report, to be released this week, to their summer reading list.
It is now more than two years since the last Queen’s Speech. This simply is not good enough.
If MPs want to disrupt the constitution and limit prerogative powers, they should say so in terms, not indirectly with a nudge and a wink.
So how are we going to get a new deal? The key is to build strong relationships, both across the Party, with our DUP allies, and with our European partners.
The Opposition leader had pressed the Prime Minister over the UK’s relationship with Saudi Arabia.
Gove, Stewart and perhaps others too could see their standing and prospects damaged this afternoon.
Nor are they being entirely straight with us when they pretend they only want to stop ‘No Deal’, when in reality they want Brexit repealed entirely.