Almost six months on from the EU referendum, we present a mini-series on five people who helped to shape the result.
We obsess about the views of EU member states, but must also consider domestic reform and global relations.
“I think you can argue that between February and the start of July, every single decision that Michael Gove made changed the course of British history.”
“There is no force on earth that brings people together like the voluntary exchange of goods and services.”
May, Johnson, Hannan, Davidson, Fabricant and others give their thoughts. Plus, has anyone checked on Sir Simon Burns?
Plus: John Rees-Evans’s bizarrre views. May’s flourishing line in jokes. Trump’s chances of winning. And: let Article 50 be put to a vote in Parliament and let’s get on with it.
The problems that change throwns up for the two countries are formidable but not insoluble.
Be it Johnson, Stein or McMullin – at least vote for someone who wouldn’t tarnish the office.
Now I have switched from UKIP to the Conservative Group on the excellent Reigate and Banstead Borough Council.
If so, we should pay any new costs.
We need a wide diversity of schools – not a binary system.
“There’s no point in leaving if we then fail to press home the global opportunities that open up.”
The true believer whose appointment to represent the European Parliament in the Brexit negotiations is “an act of war”.
Britain must honour the referendum result and leave, but “we should have the closest possible relationship with the EU”.
The group wants a Hard Brexit. Either way, the Government should move Article 50 before next spring is over.