She is moving at a brisk pace down that road towards leaving the EU.
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.
By contrast in the Conservative Party we are all Brexiteers now.
It makes sense for a new Prime Minister to take the short-term pain early on in her first term.
Plus: I now love Liverpool. Getting ready for Birmingham. Come and hear me interview David Davis there. And: My most shameful secret revealed.
Now that Labour have chosen Corbyn to be their candidate for Prime Minister, it’s the time to start making the fundamental choices between the two parties visible.
The Emmerson row is the straw on the back of this exhausted camel.
There is a trade-off between the long-term interest of the economy and the short-term interest of many Leave voters.
We were told at the time that David Cameron’s Government had secured a reformed EU…which the same people now tell us Theresa May somehow prevented it from securing.
No-one expects the former Prime Minister to be happy about what has happened. But trying to dodge responsibility is deeply unattractive.
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.
Poaching eye-catching individuals with technical expertise but no political loyalty has not proved a good way to run a Government.
May has no reason to believe that the French and German elections will produce stability in Europe. Osborne is asking her to wait for Godot.
There’s one undeniable trend among those promoted: they backed the winning candidate.
Either we widen the membership of political parties and change the way they are funded, or the next stop will be a UK-style Donald Trump.