She insists to Marr that she is trying to deliver a “good deal”, not to disrupt Brexit.
The Brexiteer backbencher argues the EU is “starting to get a reality check now” about the real possibility of inflexibility causing No Deal.
What exactly are Benn, Cooper and Boles, Creasy, Grieve, Reeves and Corbyn proposing?
“In my personal opinion, Olly Robbins should go to the Tower, in which case he should arrive by river.”
Not only would he hand control to a minority of MPs, but the supposed cross-party requirement would count defectors as endorsement from the Government benches.
He calls for the Government to pursue a deal “a new partnership” based on “the Prime Minister’s vision at Lancaster House.”
Why should the EU offer any more to an inconstant departing member, which can’t be relied on to deliver ratification of any agreement?
“The EU may do that deal, it may not – either way, Britain is not in a position to deliver any further compromises.”
The names of all 118 Conservatives who voted against the proposal, and the four Opposition MPs who voted for it.
“Parliament gave the people the choice”, the Prime Minister reminds the House ahead of the vote on her proposed deal.
“I was keen to see an agreement delivered that I could support…[but] the deal on the table potentially gives away our sovereignty and £39 billion.”
Plus a further 29 probable or possible opponents. It’s decision day: when it ends, we will know who did what.
The International Trade Secretary expresses his scepticism to Andrew Bridgen.
The DUP’s deputy leader appears unimpressed at the failure to secure legally binding improvements in the five weeks since the vote was pulled.
But he doesn’t think enough of his fellow Labour MPs will do so to carry the Withdrawal Agreement over the line.