WATCH: Davis to Conservative rebels – “Please don’t tie the Prime Minister’s hands”
“The British people decided to leave. This is going to happen.”
“The British people decided to leave. This is going to happen.”
The Prime Minister also sets out how Britain is tackling the migration crisis and Russian attempts to destabilise the Balkans.
“People across the country will recognise a basic unfairness when two people earning the same amount of money, accessing the same benefits, are paying very different contributions”.
“Today’s OBR report confirms the continued resilience of the economy.”
He sets out to deliver his first and last Spring Budget.
She is giving people what they want, and heading off a populist revolt with a moderate, balance system.
“I had to make that speech today…and if the Prime Minister can’t live with that, I have to respect her right to sack me.”
She argues that by 2019 the people might have changed their minds.
“It is unwise” he warns, and “would deepen our divisions”.
The Foreign Secretary criticises its actions in the Ukraine and elsewhere, but says that none the less there is no new Cold War.
UKIP’s leader defends his reputation on Marr and Ridge.
The Chancellor says that he believes a deal will be struck with the EU – but that we won’t simply “slink away” if it isn’t.
The Conservative rebel, AKA Douglas Hogg, argued that a unilateral guarantee would grant the Government the moral high ground.
He warns peers against exceeding their role by treating the Bill like a Christmas tree, to which they want to add baubles.
The by-election winner becomes the first Conservative to represent the area since 1935.