One area that has had relatively little attention, but could get much more, is the behaviour of commercial landlords across the country.
The idea that we should not seek the closest commercial relationship with the United States is unconscionable.
We owe farmers a mass thank you for their sterling efforts in fuelling the nation at this crucial time – and there are policy lessons to be learnt.
We should make tariff reductions conditional on meeting standards of food safety, animal welfare and environmental protection which are as good as our own.
Our scoping assessment shows there could be a £15.3 billion expansion in overall trade between the two countries, an 18 per cent increase on 2018 levels.
Eustice should start by creating an ‘Office for Natural Statistics’, to sit within DEFRA and co-ordinate data collection in a way never done before.
Can have a bold enough economic policy that people in these newly gained seats can see the difference in five years’ time?
My experience – mastering those detailed briefs, winning support, driving through reform – leaves me in the best position to achieve Brexit.
If the arguments against a target of net zero emissions by 2050 now seem familiar, that may be because we have been here before.
Single Market rules forbade the UK from ending this practice, despite widespread public outcry.
Take it from me that the US would walk away from talks if we tried to make the adoption of UK rules a precondition of any FTA.