Business for Britain Chief Executive warns that 2016 vote could rush renegotiation process.
The Sunday Times reports that No.10 is considering a date in 2016. What does that say about a Prime Minister who, apparently, wants to keep us in?
If the opinion polls are anything to go by, their share of the Scottish vote will descend to a record low. The SNP’s will hit an all-time high.
To avoid dangerous ambiguity, we need a clear idea of what change would be required to make staying ‘In’ acceptable. Here’s ours.
Which suggests that a big slice of them will campaign on the opposite side to Cameron in an In/Out referendum – even in the wake of a renegotiation.
The Culture Secretary and the Mayor illustrate the contours of two parallel, yet contrasting, leadership offers.
“So you don’t arrive at a decision because you’re a barrister and therefore you favour the bar or because you’re a solicitor and therefore you favour the solicitors’ firms.”
More than eight out of ten people in North Northamptonshire want to quit the EU.
It is important not to fall in to the error of imagining the two countries to be more similar than they really are.
Including: trouble in Greece, a minority Conservative government and support for leaving Europe.
There is no angle from which Sir John Major looks like the right person for the job.
There are two immediate, costless and politically smart things we should be doing right now.
Political smart-arses should stop taking ordinary voters (and non-voters) for fools
At last, a programme which portrays sympathetically the fight for self-determination against continental potentates and their local enthusiasts.