Having attacked EEA membership as a bad deal during the referendum, they now pretend it is a good idea in the hope of preventing Brexit.
The Tory campaign was outgunned by a broad alliance of officially non-partisan groups. But are they all truly independent? And where is their money coming from?
The Supreme Court recently made it very clear that the courtesies built into devolution do not diminish the sovereignty of Parliament.
The Prime Minister’s manifesto will have its flaws, but she has grasped the implications of Brexit more surely than any other senior politician.
What we are witnessing right now is one of those magnificent moments in British political history; a great Tory pivot.
Most of the latter are used to trying to stop rebellions, not start them.
The key point at stake is not what Parliament has a right to do, but what it is wise to do – in the wake of the most emphatic popular vote in modern history.