Really? ‘Not as bad as we thought’ is best Brexiters can do?...
Brexiters hail Cameron’s unguarded comments - even though he adds Brexit will “still be difficult”. It’s hardly what voters were sold.
Penny Mordaunt choice lays May’s powerlessness bare
New development secretary’s intervention on Turkey in referendum makes her ill-suited for job. But May has become slave to Brexit feud.
If voters want tax haven crackdown, staying in EU best bet
Brexit will make it harder to work with EU partners on international tax avoidance, and leave UK weak against US corporate behemoths.
Tories’ problem isn’t Brexit; it’s the Tory party
Brexit is like a rowdy playground game, played by disturbed children to conceal how disturbed they are, especially from themselves.
Blair plunges into migration minefield
Former PM makes good points, but risks raising expectations unrealistically and giving populists too much credit.
Thatcher’s heirs should follow her EU playbook
Why do today's Conservatives ignore all of Margaret Thatcher's European strategies?
Time for a national consensus on Brexit
Theresa May and the Conservatives promised stability but gave us chaos. They can’t be trusted with handling negotiations on their own.
May has cheek to claim ‘strong and stable leadership’
PM promises stability over “coalition of chaos”. But current turmoil stems largely from her party’s policies and persistent infighting.
Tale of two ‘triple locks’: May’s Brexit manifesto hints...
Daily Mail hails ‘triple lock’ on EU exit pledges. But the possible demise of old triple lock on pensions reveals tough economic reality.
MPs fail to learn referendum lessons
Brexiter-dominated committee misses some of biggest failings of last year’s vote: post-truth politics and a low threshold for success.
Dead hand of Downing Street lost referendum
Book by Cameron’s director of communications is meant as defence of his boss’s Brexit strategy. It ends up exposing seven bad errors.
This week: uncertainty at home, firmness abroad
Cameron is standing down from parliament and UKIP has chosen a new leader. Meanwhile, there’s still no clarity on what Brexit means.