All Labour has to do, if it wants to debate the Single Market in the Commons, is to hold opposition day debates on the subject.
The way the Article 50 process works does not aid attempts to halt Britain leaving.
She has taken a decisive step along a road that is very clearly signposted. She cannot turn back without political ruin. And there is no sign whatsoever that she wants to.
The traditions and idiosyncrasies of our legislature are a precious inheritance, and the Prime Minister must preserve them.
To date, she has seen foreign affairs through the prism of domestic security rather than that of intervention abroad.
His one-man war on consensus makes people wince and routinely raises his colleagues’ blood pressure. That’s precisely why Parliament would be poorer without him.
The Fixed-term Parliaments Act is not an impenetrable barrier, but it does complicate things.
The Speaker’s recent report on improving equality in Parliament makes some proposals which are irrelevant at best.
They worked together to found the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Syria, and he writes of his “fearless friend” in today’s Daily Telegraph.
As debate swirls about increasingly negative attitudes to our representatives, people have taken to Twitter to show their appreciation.
“She was an exemplary MP, a real servant of democracy in every way one could want or imagine. What’s happened is beyond appalling.”
“We’ve lost a great star. She was a great campaigning MP, with huge compassion and a big heart, and people are going to be very, very sad at what has happened.”
We will want to offer Parliament’s view of the extent of prerogative, and where we believe overt Parliamentary endorsement will be in the country’s interest.