From renationalisation of the energy and train companies to a bonfire of environmental and employment regulations, taking back control from Brussels has opened a new range of possibilities that were previously off the menu.
The UK has made it crystal clear to its trading partners which side of the table it is going to be on.
We need to deliver a more robust, and more balanced, outcome than we could in 2019.
It would lead to thousands of job losses and closed businesses in the UK, among other damaging consequences.
Political leadership is needed in Belfast no less than in London – in some respects, even more so.
He is well-placed to knock on the doors of individual member states, as the Government and the Union lock horns over free movement.
The EU’s missteps over the last week have provided an excellent opportunity to seek changes to the Protocol that might provide for a more durable settlement.
If the Spartans hadn’t held out against the pleas of our colleagues then Britain would have been trapped in a customs union with no way out.
Two senior ERG officers write that the Agreement excludes the jurisdiction in the UK of the European Court of Justice.
Here’s how can now use our freedoms as we leave – assuming there is no last-minute wish to be sensible by the EU and agree a free trade deal.
Closing the transition period at the end of the year will cause even greater problems than necessary.
From the start, the trade bloc has not fully understood the Belfast Agreement and has been slow to see that it undermined many of its positions.
First Minister reacts to news that there will be border checks on goods between Northern Ireland and UK mainland.
As a former Chief Secretary to the Treasury, I am uneasy about the bail-out of Flybe. Every time a private business is bailed out by the taxpayer, the pressure grows.
There is much that we can offer the region thanks to our expertise in many of the twenty-first century’s key industries.