Well, it’s been quite a week, hasn’t it?
The Speaker informs the House of Commons that it has become law.
And there are other policies she could pursue. More nurseries in primary schools. Tougher school discipline. Longer sentences for child abuse.
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.
Ministers have a clear duty to obtain legal certainty.
The longer it gets, the harder it becomes to simultaneously please both the EU institutions and the British electorate.
Everyone needs to be prepared for the hugely difficult times that we now face.
Maybe Ken Livingstone can explain.
Alex Chalk and Tania Mathias were the only MPs to vote against the Government on the Lords’ amendment.
With growing problems at home, many member states are at odds with the Commission’s punitive line on Brexit.
She says she voted against her conscience to honour the referendum outcome, but is making a stand for Parliamentary sovereignty.
She says that the poll should be “at a time when the options are clearer than they are now, but before it is too late to decide our own path”.
The Dudley South MP and keen Leaver was in intensive care during previous readings, but will make the trip to vote today.
On the eve of our conference, it’s clear that the Labour Party and the Welsh nationalists have yet to wake up to last June’s result.