Plus: Labour goes all Smethwick in Copeland. And: Sky News dumbs down at breakfast.
Lacking tactical coordination or a shared strategic goal, Remainers are suffering for having never had to organise as a faction before the 23rd June.
Most of the latter are used to trying to stop rebellions, not start them.
The script of her speech has been leaked to me from a parallel universe.
We will be an ally, not a member, of the United States of Europe.
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.
“Whether it’s specifically this form of Single Market, I don’t know,” he says, confusingly.
“Both sides in the referendum campaign made it clear that a vote to leave the EU would be a vote to leave the Single Market.”
Out of the Single Market. Out, in effect, of the Customs Union. A Parliamentary vote – but on May’s terms, not Farron’s.
We will do better outside the EU, the Single Market and the Customs Union.
It would be an error to choose to fight on ground which is impossible to defend. We must develop a vision of a liberal UK outside the EU.
Quitting it would mean more scope for trade deals and lower prices. Modern countries don’t need such unions to do business.
The Prime Minister’s priorities entail a hard Brexit, and are more important to her than economic stability.
It should raise some £250 million a year – enough to increase the UK’s borders budget by 50 per cent.
We can build a Britain that is fair on immigration, trades globally and is outward-looking – underpinned by great values of equality, fairness and freedom.