And No Deal is now activists’ most favoured option of all. Views are hardening as the endgame looms into sight.
Is Corbyn right to keep faith with his base rather than hold the Government to account on Brexit?
Instead of pressing home the attack on the Prime Minister, the Leader of the Opposition helped her regain her composure.
Power seems to be seeping away from the ancien regime.
If all this is correct, the EEA route seems to me a sensible way forward if Parliament can’t agree on a deal.
“We should not let the search for a perfect Brexit prevent a good Brexit that delivers for the British people”
“This debate.. is not about whether we could have taken a different path in the past, but which road we should take from here.”
The Attorney-General gave an electrifying performance as he refused to publish the advice he has given to ministers.
This is a lamentable background against which to campaign for the deal. If the survey is right, most members have faith in neither it nor her.
And roughly a third believe that they should back it. That’s a platform for the Prime Minister to build on – but she has little time left in which to change hearts and minds.
There is concern in some capitals that the UK can use it to secure privileged access to the Single Market in goods with, over time, a competitive advantage.
It is hard to see how the different Brexit alternatives can be presented anything like as well on TV as they will be in Parliament.
Our Executive Editor discusses our estimate of the scale of May’s troubles on Politics Live.
It is an extraordinarly inexperienced team. None of the four senior whips were appointed before July 2016, and no junior whip before June 2017.