Are you happy with Labour's new Brexit stance?
The Labour leader has promised that a government he leads will negotiate a new Brexit deal and put it to a referendum but he has resisted calls to say how the party should campaign in that public vote.
The Labour leader has promised that a government he leads will negotiate a new Brexit deal and put it to a referendum but he has resisted calls to say how the party should campaign in that public vote.
The former Prime Minister says he became convinced that he wouldn't get a different answer. You can hear more from his interview with Nick Ferrari throughout the morning on LBC.
Mr Johnson and the European Commission president sat down for their first face-to-face talks in a restaurant in Mr Juncker's native Luxembourg.
The Conservative former prime minister said Mr Johnson privately claimed there could be a "fresh renegotiation, followed by a second referendum" - which he now says he opposes. In extracts of his long-awaited memoir serialised in the Sunday Times, Mr Cameron also labelled Brexiteer Michael Gove, who was once a close friend, a "foam-flecked Faragist".
Defence Secretary Ben Wallace said documents relating to the Government's no-deal Brexit contingency planning, named Operation Yellowhammer, represent a "worst case scenario" plan, and that the Government is working "every day" to mitigate the potential effects.
Phillip Lee crossed the floor in the Commons on Tuesday as the prime minister made a statement to MPs following parliament's return from its summer break.
The source said if the group succeed in forcing him to ask Brussels to stop no-deal on 31 October, he will push for the country to go to the polls on Monday 14 October.
But as she formally resigned as leader, Ms Davidson - who had campaigned for Remain in the 2016 European referendum - cited the "conflict" she had felt over Brexit. She also said that "work has always come first" over the past eight years, but the arrival of her son Finn last October meant she now wants to make a "different choice".
The Prime Minister said it was "completely untrue" that Brexit was the motivation for the move, insisting it was time for a new session of Parliament to set out his "exciting agenda".
After cross-party talks led by Labour's Jeremy Corbyn, a co-ordinated effort to thwart Mr Johnson's plans has been promised based on passing new legislation when the Commons returns from its summer break on September 3.
The Prime Minister's also told reporters - it's the job of 'everybody in Parliament' to get Brexit done.
Tony Smith, Former head of the UK Border Force, currently an expert member of the panel advising the Alternative Arrangements Commission (The report highlighted by the the Prime Minister). He takes listener's calls
He backed the 30-day timescale suggested by German leader Angela Merkel on Wednesday for the UK to come forward with its proposals but warned the Irish backstop - the major stumbling block - was indispensable.
Former HS2 Ltd chairman Douglas Oakervee will lead the inquiry, with Lord Berkeley - a long-term critic of the high-speed railway scheme - acting as his deputy. The DfT said the review will consider a number of factors relating to HS2, including its benefits, impacts, affordability, efficiency, deliverability, scope and phasing.
The Prime Minister said that the backstop - the contingency plan to avoid a hard border with Ireland - should be removed from the divorce deal ahead of the October 31 Brexit deadline.
The Labour leader hopes to form a unity government and has mmade a plea to opposition MP's for their support.
Speaking after a meeting with the Prime Minister in Northern Ireland, Sinn Fein ((pron: shin fain)) insisted leaving without an agreement would be "catastrophic". Their leader Mary Lou McDonald also dismissed his claim about being impartial - after the PM had dinner with a rival party, the DUP.
He's now written to Jeremy Corbyn claiming he's destroying the party. Mr Campbell says that following the last general election, the leader's failed to impress.
Mr Johnson is making his first official visit north of the border since becoming Prime Minister to announce the expansion of regional Growth Deals in parts of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. The Conservative leader said he wants to ensure that no corner of the UK is left behind.
Since Boris Johnson became Prime Minister after being declared party chief by Tory members, the Conservatives have gained 10 points to stand at 30%, a survey by Deltapoll for the Mail on Sunday showed. That puts them five points ahead of Labour at 25%, with the Liberal Democrats on 18% and the Brexit Party on 14%. But if Labour was to drop Jeremy Corbyn as leader, the poll says the party would shoot into the lead at 34%, with the Tories on 28%, the Brexit Party on 14% and the Lib Dems on 13%....
Where have we heard this before? Oh yeah, Donald Trump has said the same thing about America. Do you see Boris as Britain’s Trump?
He's also made a number of other pledges on the steps of Downing Street.
He'll be officially in the job by this time tomorrow - after twice as many Conservative members backed him in a ballot than his rival Jeremy Hunt. In his victory speech he vowed to deliver Brexit, unite the country and defeat Labour's Jeremy Corbyn.
Johnson’s pitch throughout the Conservative leadership election has been that October 31st is a hard deadline for Brexit. Having already seen two deadlines come and go, the former Foreign Secretary declared delivering on this third date will be “do or die”. The public doesn’t buy it, however.
In the latest batch, Sir Kim Darroch claims Donald Trump pullred out of the Iran nuclear deal just to spite his predecessor, Barack Obama. They've been published despite a warning not to from Scotland Yard.
Tom Watson told the party's general secretary Jennie Formby the document produced for the Equality and Human Rights Commission should be made public because "only sunlight can disinfect Labour of anti-Semitism now".
Listen to Nigel Farage Monday to Thursdays at 6PM and Sundays at 10AM
The Foreign Office defended the comments saying "The British public would expect our ambassadors to provide ministers with an honest, unvarnished assessment of the politics in their country.
The Conservative leadership hopeful told the Daily Telegraph that he would support a vote in Parliament when there was a majority in the Commons likely to back the move.
Mrs May came back with: "There's another question for the Labour Party on this with all this talk about no-deal. The question really is: where does the Labour Party stand on Brexit? "The shadow Brexit secretary (Sir Keir Starmer) doesn't support Brexit, the shadow foreign secretary (Emily Thornberry), the shadow chancellor (John McDonnell) doesn't support Brexit, the Labour deputy leader (Tom Watson) doesn't support Brexit. "Labour wants to block Brexit and that would be a betrayal of the many b...