Drop the ‘no deal better than bad deal’ mantra
The prime minister went into the general election seeking a personal mandate for a hard, extreme Brexit. The country refused to give it to her.
The prime minister went into the general election seeking a personal mandate for a hard, extreme Brexit. The country refused to give it to her.
Parliament must not be sidelined as the Brexit negotiations continue.
We oppose the Brexit policy being dictated by the Tory right. Leaving the single market would cost public services £31bn. Our party should fight that.
To sacrifice membership in negotiations, as the Conservatives have promised, jeopardises jobs and does little to address voters’ concerns over immigration.
A look at the past statements of pro-Leave Tories who are driving Theresa May's agenda lifts the lid off a Pandora’s Box of unpleasant right-wing policies.
Londoners are being dragged along a road they had no desire to go down, driven by a Government which seems utterly indifferent to their wishes and concerns.
At this election, it is vital that these hard Brexit Tories are held accountable, for their lies and their impossible promises.
In her speech in Downing Street yesterday, in which she accused the EU of interfering in our general election, she looked both weak and erratic.
We can can build a new economic and political settlement which avoids a return to New Labour or to electoral failure.
I passionately believe that our community and our country is better off, safer and stronger in the world with the UK as a member of the EU.
The government has no mandate for a Brexit that leaves our NHS worse off.
Europe is our most important trading partner; the value of a US deal has been overstated.