Plus: Can Corbyn survive losing both by-elections? Trump has the tone of Mussolini and the content of Lindbergh. And: another Lib Dem blunder.
The logic of her view that no deal is better than a bad one suggests that, like Thatcher at Fontainebleau, she is prepared to walk away if necessary.
He might have got his life back, but he doesn’t seem to want to give up the limelight.
A reminder that most constituencies are not Richmond Park, and most voters are not Continuity Remainers.
Whatever the answer, the party’s rise and the elevation of Paul Nuttall is a potential disaster for Labour.
The People’s Army has lost thousands of members, has barely any money and is still beset by infighting.
Plus: John Rees-Evans’s bizarrre views. May’s flourishing line in jokes. Trump’s chances of winning. And: let Article 50 be put to a vote in Parliament and let’s get on with it.
He says that now May is Prime Minister, Ukip ‘may well get peerages’
Plus: Osborne – terrible at predictions but brilliant at quizzes. The Brexiteers sweep the Select Committee board. And: all the very best to Nick Boles.
A reflection on the provisional results of the 2016 ONS Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings, published today.
I quiz David Davis. I speak for freedom. And: I will not back down over our book about Hillsborough by Norman Bettison.
You sometimes stand so close to something that you can’t really see it. So it is with the staggering implictations of what Britain did on June 23rd.
Plus: Trump’s folly, Miliband’s mess, my first West Ham game at the Olympic Stadium – and Margaret Thatcher, Queen of Game Shows.
With the departure of their leader, and the Leave victory achieved, the “People’s Army” is turning its eyes to new voters and new messages.