The former Brexit Secretary argues that this is the responsible thing to do to avoid a no-deal exit and ensure the UK leaves the EU.
Such as: do you see Brexit as a help or a hindrance – and what’s your vision for our post-Leave country?
Hers or Letwins? That’s what the choice is narrowing down to. From the point of view of trust in politics, how MPs vote will now make little difference – if any.
The panel, comprising legally-trained Conservative and DUP MPs as well as outside experts, set out their full legal reasoning for rejecting the deal.
Which presumably means, since Dodds is one of the eight, that the DUP takes the same view.
“People need the opportunity to benefit from their ability, their determination, and their hard-work.”
The former Brexit Secretary doesn’t see how a deal rejected by record margins passes on the second try without substantial changes.
The latter, we believe. And we caution against presuming that they are predisposed to support a revised deal.
The logic of his position was that the UK was leaving by March 29th. It hasn’t changed. The Government’s has. So he’s gone.
The words of Gordon Brown to Tony Blair echo in our ears. “There is nothing that you could say to me now that I could ever believe”.
I welcome the suggestion that local Associations should follow the lead that the National Convention took last weekend.