Others applauded him for “straight-talking” and argued the proposal was about silencing concerns about immigration.
We need to encourage people to find ways of belonging that don’t foster hatred, and allow people to mix with others from different backgrounds.
The Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union’s full Commons statement.
It will therefore be concluded that she did know when she spoke in a Commons debate on the matter last July.
“We are deceiving ourselves if we believe that we have no responsibility for what has happened in Syria.”
If you’re pro-Leave, don’t be lulled into a false sense of security by yesterday’s emphatic vote for Article 50.
Also: The Opposition’s motion as amended by the Government in full.
Commons fun and games today – but with serious implications for the coming negotiation.
“This is my first Autumn Statement as Chancellor…I have decided that it will also be my last.”
And on Brexit, as one who campaigned for In, I say we should get on with it, and avoid the one outcome that is infinitely less preferable to Leave or Remain: limbo.
Plus: John Rees-Evans’s bizarrre views. May’s flourishing line in jokes. Trump’s chances of winning. And: let Article 50 be put to a vote in Parliament and let’s get on with it.
The Transport Secretary highlighted the “significant” cost of continued inaction.
Matters might reach a point at which although Brexit is not blocked, orderly government becomes impossible.
As MPs, we have to react positively, optimistically and maturely as we try to make sense of the mandate given to us by the British people.