Those Remainer MPs who hope to continue the fight face particular difficulties.
Yet even if their concerns don’t ultimately lead to them backing someone else, these shouldn’t simply be dismissed as having no consequences.
Get policy right, and our farmers and growers can, and will, innovate and seize the opportunities that change will undoubtedly bring.
In the short-term, this editorship unleashes a clowder of cats in the Conservative dovecot. In the longer, the move looks like a step nearer Westminster’s exit door.
A third-rate leader like her – who can’t even run her schools properly – wants to make me a foreigner to my other half, and turn my home into “abroad”.
Well, it’s been quite a week, hasn’t it?
“It is wonderful that you are releasing an album on March 17 to mark your 100th birthday. Why have you decided to do this?”
In terms of the effectiveness of government and its presentation to voters, the Prime Minister could lose roughly a third of it without losing any sleep.
In yesterday evening’s showdown debate, the politician and the expert were excessively polite to each other.
It was this very same attitude on the part of the EU that caused us to vote Leave in the first place.
A third of 2014 Yes voters supported Leave last year. There is an opportunity to split them away from Scottish secessionism.
The longer it gets, the harder it becomes to simultaneously please both the EU institutions and the British electorate.
If there is to be any move towards all workers being taxed in the same way, there must also be reforms to workplace support too.
It’s possible to accept all the arguments suggesting that it’s sensible for us to do so – but still feel morally queasy.
Impartiality shouldn’t be mistaken for overlooking so much that is good about Britain.