The most ominous portent for a second poll is that the No campaign has collapsed. It needs rebooting urgently.
The then Prime Minister’s deal was scarely mentioned by either campaign during the referendum – but had a decisive effect on the result none the less.
Almost six months on from the EU referendum, we present a mini-series on five people who helped to shape the result.
The group wants a Hard Brexit. Either way, the Government should move Article 50 before next spring is over.
A committed movement, armed with a strong message and moulded into an effective ground machine won out.
The sooner all concerned grasp this, the better.
After a painful week – including attempts to unseat Cummings – Steve Baker acts as peacemaker and urges a ceasefire.
The discussion foundered on the question of personalities. It is a big disappointment to those hoping for both sides to work together.
The key Eurosceptic donors who will fund the anti-EU campaign do not feel they can work with him. Will he step aside to aid the cause?
Vote Leave and leave.eu need to join together to fight the pro-EU campaign – and not each other.
We’re off! The new organisation for Brexit has a no-nonsense message, all-party support, lots of money – and should become the official Leave campaign.
The Electoral Commission will assess each campaign’s cash, competence and cross-party base. Elliott/Cummings are in the lead.
The governing duopoly of the Prime Minister and Chancellor should be replaced by a collegiate top team – including the present ’22 Chairman as a new Chief Whip.
The Prime Minister has talked tough on serious EU reform – now we need to see his actions live up to his words.
A new project to hold the Government to account in honouring its pledge that “Brexit means Brexit”.