Has the renegotiation plan changed your mind? If so, in which direction?
Legal wrangling is not exciting but it is important. In this instance, it shows the fundamental weakness of the EU renegotiation package.
Ministers have a course to follow if they don’t like Cameron’s draft EU deal. And, no, it isn’t to resign.
If I am to vote to remain in the EU I need a lot more than a bit of tinkering around the edges by a Prime Minister who should be leading rather than following.
Conservatives in the European Parliament are leading the way to implement a Passenger Name Record system.
We reproduce his Brexit speech from this morning in full.
It has the capacity to ensure that the UK gets the best of both worlds.
The whole process has shown beyond doubt that the EU cannot be reformed from within.
The third instalment in our mini-series finds that were the UK to vote to stay in, we will be dragged into the EU’s wild ride to political union.
If the Brexiteers want to win over fence-sitters like me, they must up their game.
Here are the links.
On the welfare ’emergency brake’ and the ‘red card’ system to block new EU laws, the deal does not match up to what was asked for.
Part Two in our mini-series concludes that the choice is between a possible wrangle over free movement if we leave and the certainty of more uncontrolled migration if we don’t.
She says that the Commission’s proposals form “the basis for a deal”.
“The Brits would be happier outside. But we don’t want them to leave.”