Sign up here to receive the daily news briefing in your inbox every morning with exclusive insight from the BrexitCentral team Remainer MPs ‘planning to revoke Article 50’ in bid to kill off Brexit Remainer MPs are secretly plotting to revoke Article 50 and stop the UK leaving the European Union at the end of next month, the Government warned on Saturday night. If no deal can be agreed with EU leaders by October, Downing Street sources say a “Remain alliance” of MPs in the Commons will try to force through new legislation to stop Brexit altogether. It came as another Tory rebel joined the Liberal Democrats on Saturday night. Sam Gyimah, the former universities minister who had the whip removed after voting against the Government, joined Jo Swinson, the Lib Dem leader, on stage at the party’s conference. Boris Johnson prepares to fly to Luxembourg on Monday to tell Jean-Claude Juncker, the European Union president, that he is “striving” to agree a Brexit deal before next month’s EU Council showdown on Oct 17-18. The Prime Minister will then return to Britain to try to head off a three-day legal challenge to his decision to prorogue Parliament, which starts in the Supreme Court on Tuesday. – Sunday Telegraph (£) Boris Johnson braced for ‘mother of all battles’ with Remainer MPs — to stop ‘block Brexit forever’ secret plot – The Sun Britain will break free of its ‘manacles’ from the EU like the Incredible Hulk, says Boris Johnson ahead of crunch meeting with Jean-Claude Juncker… Boris Johnson today tells Brussels that Britain will break out of its ‘manacles’ like The Incredible Hulk if a Brexit deal cannot be struck by October 31. In an exclusive interview with The Mail on Sunday, the Prime Minister says that if negotiations break down, he will ignore the Commons vote ordering him to delay the UK’s departure, adding: ‘The madder Hulk gets, the stronger Hulk gets.’ Mr Johnson’s bullish declaration comes ahead of a crunch meeting tomorrow with European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker. There has been cautious optimism that negotiations with the EU are edging closer to a breakthrough. And in his interview, Mr Johnson reports ‘real signs of movement’ in Berlin, Paris and Dublin over ditching the backstop that would tie the UK or Northern Ireland to EU rules – the issue which proved fatal to Theresa May’s deal. ‘I think that… we will get there,’ he says. ‘I will be talking to Jean-Claude about how we’re going to do it. – Mail on Sunday …where he reiterates he will reject any Brexit extension offer from the EU Boris Johnson is set to tell EU boss Jean-Claude Juncker on Monday: “Don’t you dare offer me a Brexit extension.” And the Prime Minister will warn the Commission president he will reject it out of hand if he does. Mr Johnson is gearing up for a fiery showdown with Mr Juncker when he meets him for the first time as PM in Luxembourg. EU chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier has also been called to the crunch lunch of snails, salmon and cheese for the PM’s tongue-lashing. Brexit Secretary Stephen Barclay will be on hand to hold Mr Johnson’s coat when things get heated. Mr Johnson plans to say in uncompromising terms that he intends to defy Parliament’s demand to reject no-deal and extend our EU membership by three months. The PM will say: “Forget MPs’ Surrender Act. I don’t want, won’t negotiate and won’t accept another delay.” And he will set the EU a deadline of the Brussels summit on October 18 to strike an agreement – or we will leave without a deal on October 31. That means Mr Johnson is planning to break the law if necessary and is prepared to face jail after MPs voted for a delay. A No10 source said: “MPs want to send the PM to Brussels, cap doffed, begging for another pointless extension. It’s beyond a joke. – Sunday Mirror If Boris Johnson agrees a Brexit deal, he will push it through Parliament ‘in a 10-day blitz’, says Number 10 Boris Johnson plans to push through a new Brexit deal in a 10-day blitz, says Number 10. The Prime Minister and MPs will work round the clock during late-night and weekend sittings to thrash out an agreement before the October 31 deadline. The Financial Times said that hopes to fast-track a new Brexit deal are being sparked by Johnson’s team, which has compiled plans to help the PM get a deal at a Brussels summit from October 17-18 with the European Union. Number 10 believes Johnson could then quickly pursue the new withdrawal deal through parliament. The Prime Minister has repeatedly said that he will take Britain out of the EU at the end of October, and that he would rather be “dead in a ditch” than ask for an extension. He could break the ongoing Brexit deadlock if he gets the bloc to ditch its red line of no-checks on the island of Ireland. Brexit Secretary Steve Barclay has drawn up three tests the Government must meet before it formally asks to renegotiate the deal — and has passed two of them. He told a key Cabinet committee this week that solutions have been found to avoid infrastructure on the border with Ireland, and a way to protect the integrity of the EU’s single market. But there is no solution yet to the third test — to avoid goods checks on the island of Ireland. – The Sun Jeremy Corbyn pledges to do ‘all he can’ to prevent a no-deal Brexit… Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has pledged he will do all he can to stop a “no-deal crash out” from the European Union. On Saturday, Mr Corbyn said that if Mr Johnson forces a no-deal Brexit on October 31 in spite of the law passed by Parliament, opposition parties would work together to hold the government to account for its “irresponsible behaviour.” He said: “Opposition parties have worked very closely on this. We will do all we can to prevent that no-deal crash-out because of all the damage that will do to jobs, living standards, supply chains, food supplies and medicine supplies, and if it happens we’re absolutely determined to bring this government to account to make them answer for their irresponsible behaviour.” Mr Corbyn continued: “I personally, and my party, will have no truck with this sweetheart trade deal with the USA which would lead to intervention by American companies into our health service, into our public services.” The Labour leader was addressing a rally of workers and trade unionists in Kirkcaldy, Fife. – iNews …as a final Brexit battle looms for Labour at its party conference A leaked dossier reveals the scale of dissent that Jeremy Corbyn will face over his Brexit position at the Labour Party conference next weekend. Four hundred pages of motions due to be debated in Brighton indicate a showdown between Corbyn and his grassroots over the European Union. Labour has pledged to hold a second referendum if it gets into government — but stopped short of saying that it would campaign for remain in all circumstances. More than 50 constituency Labour parties (CLPs), including many supportive of Corbyn personally, have submitted motions calling for an unambiguously pro-remain position. Dozens say that Labour’s manifesto must support stopping Brexit by campaigning for remain in a second referendum or by revoking article 50. Many use the same language: “Brexit is part of a right-wing nationalist exploitation of a global economic and social crisis.” Other themes include: “We cannot go into a general election without a clear ‘remain’ policy” and “Labour will campaign energetically for a public vote, to remain, and support revoking article 50 if necessary to prevent no deal.” If successful, the motions could precipitate a change in Labour’s eventual manifesto. They also put Corbyn under personal pressure days after unions backed a delicate compromise on the EU. – Sunday Times (£) Remainer Conservative MP Sam Gyimah joins the Lib Dems Former Conservative MP Sam Gyimah has joined the Liberal Democrats. Six MPs have defected to the party in recent weeks, including former Tory MP Philip Lee, and ex-Labour MPs Luciana Berger and Chuka Umunna. Mr Gyimah was one of the 21 Tories who had the Conservative whip removed after rebelling against Boris Johnson in a bid to prevent a no-deal Brexit. Last December, the East Surrey MP quit as science and universities minister in a row over Theresa May’s Brexit deal. The 43-year-old briefly stood in the race to become Conservative Party leader after Mrs May quit. The Lib Dems currently have 18 MPs, having been boosted by a victory in the Brecon and Radnorshire by-election and the defections. – BBC News John Bercow fires parting shot on No Deal as ministers plot to stop Harriet Harman replacing him as Speaker Britons do not want a no-deal Brexit, John Bercow has said in an outspoken attack on a key policy of Boris Johnson’s Government to prepare for one. The news came as it emerged that Cabinet ministers have launched an “anyone but Harriet” campaign to stop Harriet Harman being made speaker of the Commons when Mr Bercow steps down in seven weeks’ time. Mr Bercow told a private party of 500 City lawyers and clients last week that the majority of Britons do not want the UK to leave the European Union without a deal at the end of next month. He told the reception at DLA Piper’s offices in the City of London that people would much prefer “an arrangement that is orderly by comparison with an unsolicited and not desired sudden ejection”. I think it would be accurate to say that most people, including those who advocated Brexit, did advocate Brexit with some sort of agreement. And if in fact that isn’t what emerges, that will be extremely challenging,” he added. – Sunday Telegraph (£) Brits have completely lost confidence in our MPs, finds poll… British people have no confidence in the country’s politicians as the Brexit crisis hits new depths, a stunning poll has revealed. Almost eight in 10 believe Parliament is in desperate need of reform and 74 percent believe it is not fit for the 21st century. Seven in 10 think it fails to reflect the nation’s views and three-quarters believe that, internationally, it does not show Britain in a good light. A ComRes survey, carried out for the Sunday Express, found that almost six in 10 say it has not respected the 2016 referendum result – causing Brexiteers to blame the lack of trust in MPs on the failure to leave the EU. Last night Nigel Farage told the Sunday Express: “This polling shows the contempt the people now hold politicians in, and they are right to feel that way.” A Downing Street source said: “It is tragic that the deadlock brought about by those who want to cancel the referendum result has had such a chilling effect on our trust in parliamentary democracy. It’s clear that the British people have lost confidence in Parliament.” – Sunday Express …while the Tories extend their poll lead to 12%, despite a week of political chaos The Conservatives have pushed further ahead of Labour in the latest Opinium/Observer poll – despite yet another turbulent week for Boris Johnson. The latest poll shows the Tories on 37%, up two since last week, while Labour is unchanged on 25%. The Liberal Democrats whose conference opens this weekend in Bournemouth are on 16% (down one), and the Brexit party is also unchanged on 13%. The polling – conducted after Johnson shut down parliament for five weeks last Tuesday, and Scottish judges subsequently ruled his action to have been unlawful – shows the Conservatives are continuing to consolidate their support among leave voters. Among this group, 55% said they would now vote Conservative in a general election, the highest figure since February. Almost a fifth (19%) of Labour leave voters are now intending to vote Conservative, suggesting views on Brexit are determining voters’ choice more than traditional party loyalties. The poll suggests many voters are unclear about Labour’s Brexit stance while the Liberal Democrats are seen as having an unambiguous policy. – Observer NHS chiefs set up 24-hour supply lines to ensure vital drugs are available in the event of a no-deal Brexit NHS chiefs have set up 24-hour supply lines to ensure a steady stream of medicine is available in the event of a no-deal Brexit. Special express freight services have been booked to ensure hospitals and pharmacies never run short of vital drugs. Ministers have secretly demanded that suppliers have at least six weeks’ worth of everything from Calpol to insulin in store. But they fear their efforts risk being undermined by politically-motivated doctors spreading scare stories – and prompting patients to stockpile medicine. The massive safeguards put in place to avoid a crisis are revealed in a leaked internal document for senior NHS managers obtained by The Sun on Sunday. It shows how the system is well prepared for even a worst-case scenario and that patients are the least likely to be affected by any post-Brexit disruption. Health Secretary Matt Hancock has procured an express freight service to deliver products into the country in well under 24 hours. In the event of lorry tailbacks at Dover, trucks carrying medical supplies will be given fast-track entry – as the number one priority, ahead of food. Cancer drugs will be flown directly into East Midlands airport under a government rapid procurement scheme if necessary. But senior officials say the six-week “buffer” of stocks should be enough to avoid any shortage. Dominic Fear, of NHS Improvement, told a meeting of top medics: “It is a matter of life in the NHS that we deal with medicine shortages and we’ve got quite good means of avoiding some of those. These have been bolstered as part of our preparations. In addition we have put in place extra measures.” – The Sun Nicky Morgan says she would vote Remain in a second referendum (but that she doesn’t want one) Nicky Morgan has said she would vote to remain in the EU if there were to be a second referendum. The culture secretary, who campaigned for remain in the run-up to the 2016 poll, said on BBC Breakfast she would vote the same way again. Morgan originally said she did not support holding another poll and believed the original result should be accepted. When asked how she would vote if the public were asked directly again, she said: “I would vote to remain.” All opposition parties support a second referendum. When pressed to clarify why she was serving in Boris Johnson’s cabinet if this was her view, she said: “It is not a result I was comfortable with but I have accepted it.” She later told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “I feel very firmly that the result of the 2016 referendum needs to be fulfilled and that’s why I’m in the cabinet and that’s why I support Boris Johnson’s determination to make sure that we do leave the EU by 31 October, preferably with a deal. – Observer David Cameron should stop whining about Brexit and return to help deliver it, says Lord Lilley David Cameron should stop whining about the Brexit result and come back to help deliver it, a leading Brexiteer has said. Lord Lilley, the former Conservative cabinet minister, criticised the former prime minister for writing in his memoir that the Brexit referendum of 2016 had “turned into this terrible Tory psychodrama”, as he called on Mr Cameron to accept it was his “job” to remind people of the pledge he initially made three years ago. Speaking on Newsnight Lord Lilley said that the 17.4 million people who voted to leave the EU “didn’t care a fig about Tory psychodramas or anything else” as he accused Mr Cameron of using “an extraordinary Westminster bubble phrase”. “Most put aside party loyalties and voted on the issue,” he said. “It’s the job of David himself, to remind people of the pledge he made at the beginning.” – Sunday Telegraph (£) David Cameron’s fury at the ‘liars’ of the Leave campaign – Sunday Times (£) > WATCH: Jonathan Isaby on Sky News: Cameron was arrogant not to expect Brexit Daniel Hannan: Our democracy is being overthrown by the EU’s hideous strength It’s not about Brexit any more, at least not primarily. It’s about whether we remain a democracy in the fullest sense. Our system depends on unwritten conventions and precedents. We expect winners to show restraint and losers to show consent. We expect our officials – including judges, civil servants and, not least, the Commons Speaker – to be impartial. We expect the electorate to be the final umpire.All these norms are coming under pressure as the campaign to reverse Brexit intensifies. The EU, as well as being undemocratic in itself, tends to degrade the internal democracy of its member nations. Everyone knows that the Brussels institutions are oligarchic, combining executive and legislative power in the hands of commissars who are immune to public opinion. What is less widely appreciated is the extent to which the 28 member states are also required to alter their domestic constitutions so as to sustain the requirements of membership. Elections are rerun, coalitions broken, laws ignored, parties annihilated, referendums overturned, prime ministers toppled – all for the sake of deeper integration. – Daniel Hannan MEP for the Sunday Telegraph (£) Janet Daley: Boris is going to get a deal. But the Brexit process has done untold damage to British political life I’m pretty sure I know what’s going to happen now. There is going to be a deal – or something that can plausibly be presented as one – by the end of October. This would have been much easier to accomplish without the extraordinary seizure of government by the Remain faction in Parliament whose actual intention, of course, was not to prevent No Deal but to prevent Brexit itself. By undermining the prime minister’s bargaining position, the Speaker and his friends have done their very best to persuade the EU that there is no point in negotiating with him, and that they can just wait it out, since the possibility of No Deal has been outlawed. But mercifully, there are indications that Brussels and the DUP find this too risky a bet. So the threat of No Deal remains in play and everybody is having to come to terms with this despite the antics in Westminster and the various courts that have been drafted into the game – whose contradictory conclusions are only adding to distrust of the Remainers’ confident assurances to their friends in Brussels that they have paralysed the government and put an end to Brexit. But even if the Leave case wins through, the damage that has been done to British political life is horrendous. – Janet Daley for the Sunday Telegraph (£) Liam Halligan: Operation Yellowhammer is the latest cynical attempt to cripple business planning and frighten the public Since we voted to leave the European Union in June 2016, the UK economy has shown serious resilience. HM Treasury’s pre-referendum warning – that any Brexit vote, even before we left, would spark “an immediate and profound economic shock” – proved laughably wrong. Since then, against a near-constant drumbeat of media negativity, Britain has recorded solid growth, improving public finances and record-low unemployment. Ongoing US-China trade tensions, and overvalued financial markets drenched in geopolitical risk, mean the global environment is getting tougher. With Germany now in recession, the eurozone continues to stagnate. Last week, the European Central Bank drove rates deeper into negative territory, down to minus 0.5pc. There’s an acute danger the UK’s nearest-neighbour will fall into a Japanese-style deflationary slump. Yet, new figures show UK GDP expanded by a healthy 0.3pc in July – comfortably above expectations, confounding gloom-merchant Remainer economists. Wage growth hit 4pc during the three months to July – the fastest rise in a decade. For all the Westminster chaos, the pound – against both the euro and the dollar – just hit an eight-week high. “Project Fear” economists, in Whitehall and elsewhere, are now focused on portraying a no-deal Brexit as a disaster. This has been the alibi for anti-Brexit “I respect the referendum result” MPs, with help from Speaker Bercow, to rule such an outcome illegal – making it impossible for Boris Johnson to negotiate with Brussels. That’s why the government must launch a strong counter-narrative, reassuring the public that leaving without a deal is no disaster. On the contrary, as the head of the World Trade Organisation told me back in November 2017, no deal is “perfectly manageable”. – Liam Halligan for the Sunday Telegraph (£) > John May on BrexitCentral today: It’s time for some perspective to replace the Operation Yellowhammer hysteria Rod Liddle: From here to Brexiternity, no one knows when this deranged carnival will be over Right now we can say that the prospect of an imminent general election has receded a little and that back on the menu is that old favourite, the second referendum. The thinking at the moment is that it might clear the air, offer us a little certitude. To my mind, the last vote offered precisely that; and when the odious Alastair Campbell, Lord Mandelson and Sir John Major insist that, “Ah, but now we know better what Brexit means”, I would make two points. First, you don’t mean “we”, you mean “you unwashed, pig-ignorant dimbo leavers”. Nobody who voted to leave thinks we need a second referendum because, first time around, information was thin on the ground. Only remainers say that — and when asked, they are mysteriously unable to tell us what it is that they now know that they didn’t three years ago. Second, my suspicion is that, in any case, we all now know slightly less than we did on June 23, 2016. OK, we know Project Fear was a grotesque and perhaps criminal exaggeration. But we don’t know any more, really, about what Brexit would mean. All we have had is three years of claim and counter-claim between the liberal Establishment and the majority of the people. A second referendum might give certainty if the question on the polling card were exactly the same as it was on June 23, 2016. Then, I think, “leave” would win by something approaching two-thirds. Almost all of the remainers I know now want us out, both as a matter of principle and on account of that exquisite boredom I mentioned before. But, of course, that will not be the question. It is quite possible that they will get Konnie Huq to formulate the question, which might then be: “Do you want to remain in the European Union or do you want to be decapitated, you working-class morons?” – Rod Liddle for the Sunday Times (£) Sunday Times: Lib Dems risk becoming illiberal on Brexit From just over 7% in the 2017 election, the Lib Dems are currently on about 20% in the polls. The party did well in the European parliament elections, and in the Brecon and Radnorshire by-election forged a successful remain alliance which resulted in a victory for their candidate. They have an articulate, though as yet largely unknown, new leader in Jo Swinson. Events have been moving the Lib Dems’ way and, after the role they played in a generally successful coalition, the party deserves a break. It should be careful, however, about how it proceeds from here. The Lib Dems, who successfully campaigned in the European parliament elections under a crude “Bollocks to Brexit” slogan, now want to go a stage further. Instead of pushing for a second referendum, which was the party’s position, its leadership wants members to vote at its conference in Bournemouth today on a policy of revoking article 50 and keeping Britain in the EU, without resort to another referendum. Even many diehard remain supporters will feel queasy about that. It is hard to maintain a position of criticising Boris Johnson’s election by Tory party members as “undemocratic”, and proroguing parliament as even more so, while pledging to overturn the democratic vote of three years ago without consulting us. It looks like a case of political overreach, and the Lib Dems should not be illiberal by committing themselves to it. – Sunday Times (£) editorial Alexandra Phillips: Why Boris should sign a non-aggression pact with the Brexit party Remember that mildly cringeworthy gag when Boris won the Tory leadership contest, and he promised to ‘Deliver Brexit, Unite the Country and Defeat Jeremy Corbyn’? He joked that Defeat, Unite and Deliver made the rather unfortunate acronym of ‘dud’. Throw in ‘energise’, and he claimed that he would be the ‘dude’ to save the UK from its Brexistential crisis. Dad jokes aside, Boris now needs to take a NAP if he’s serious about Brexit. He is making the biggest blunder of his political career by dismissing Nigel Farage’s offer of a Non-Aggression Pact with the Brexit party. The only way now to deliver on the 2016 referendum result is to have a major clear-out of the democracy-denying Brexit blockers currently occupying the Commons’ green benches. But if the maths in Parliament has been tricky for the Conservative party recently, the maths in the polls are a nightmare. They suggest the Prime Minister has no clear path towards a workable majority in the House of Commons. A vast majority of voters today identify primarily with being either a Leaver or a Remainer, even more than their allegiance to old political tribes. These are exceptional times. The Brexit party isn’t asking for a merger. We say it is in our interest to work together to ensure those 17.4 million Leave voters are not cheated out of Brexit. If Boris wants to stay in Number 10 and deliver Brexit ‘do or die’ his strategy should be clear – he simply has to sign a non-aggression pact. – Alexandra Phillips MEP for The Spectator Tony Parsons: Boris Johnson’s Nigel Farage veto may give Jeremy Corbyn the keys to No. 10 Nigel Farage holds out the hand of friendship to Boris Johnson – and the Prime Minister smacks him in the cakehole with a wet kipper. The Brexit Party leader takes out a full-page ad in this newspaper offering an election pact with the Tories, and Downing Street briefs that Farage and his donor Arron Banks are “not fit and proper persons — they should never be allowed anywhere near government”. Farage says let’s work together. And the Tories gob in his eye. I guess that’s a “no” then, Nigel. Boris Johnson calculates that he does not need the help of Farage to secure Brexit. No doubt Boris also calculates that any kind of formal alliance with the Brexit Party would scare all those Brussels-loving Tories — and goodness knows there are plenty of them, even in the PM’s own family. And yes, Boris needs to keep the Tories as a broad church rather than an ideologically pure sect. But Tory snobs calling Farage the devil’s spawn sounds suspiciously like David Cameron’s crack about Ukip being made up of “fruitcakes, loonies and closet racists”. As Cameron learned, such disrespectful talk can come back to kick you in the goolies. More than five million people voted for the Brexit Party in the European Elections in May, making them by far the biggest party. – Tony Parsons for The Sun Stephen Kinnock and Victoria Prentis: Hardcore Brexiteers and Remainers shout the loudest but they don’t speak for the country In 2016 more than 17.4m people voted to leave the European Union. A year later both main parties – Conservatives and Labour – stood on election manifestos promising to respect the public’s wishes by leaving the EU with a deal. Yet two years on, the debate has become more hostile and polarised that in the run up to the referendum. We have Farage’s no-deal Brexiteers pulling one way. And those who want no Brexit at all pulling in the other direction. Neither are true democrats, because during the referendum the Leave camp promised to get a good deal from the EU, while Remain politicians said that they’d respect the result. And while those divisive groups may shout the loudest, neither represent the majority of the British public who just want politicians to get on with it and work together to deliver a sensible Brexit. That’s why we’ve this week formed our cross-party MPs For A Deal group, to remind the public that there is still a majority of politicians who would prefer a deal-based Brexit to a catastrophic no-deal Brexit or an undemocratic no Brexit at all. The desire to agree a Brexit deal is there. A failure to do so may well result in the consequences set out in the government’s own ‘Operation Yellowhammer’ no-deal report. Sensible MPs desperately need to face down the divisive voices on either side and come together in the national interest. – Stephen Kinnock MP and Victoria Prentis MP for The Sun The Sun: Boris Johnson will not blink in stand-off with Remoaners after rebels colluded with Labour in their misguided bid to block No Deal Brexit Remoaners take note: Boris Johnson is not for turning on his October 31 deadline. No10 is braced for a make-or-break showdown with MPs if BoJo defies their Surrender Act in Brussels tomorrow and refuses any extension offered by the EU. The PM’s aides are already predicting major court battles and attempted Parliamentary coups to kill Brexit by revoking Article 50. But they insist he will not blink first. It would be an outrage if Tory rebels who colluded with Labour in a misguided bid to block No Deal sided with this anarchic rabble once again. These turncoats portray themselves as honourable victims of a despotic PM, but their credibility will collapse if they repeatedly try to thwart the will of the people. Such treachery will irrevocably split the Tory party and hand power to Jeremy Corbyn and his Marxist cronies. BoJo will look EU bosses in the eye tomorrow and tell them he will brook no further delay, deal or no deal. With his bullish approach beginning to bear fruit in the negotiations, he has made clear he is in no mood to back down, however high risk his strategy. As for those Tory rebels, if they belatedly support BoJo and come back into the fold, there is a great future for this country. With unemployment at record lows and the economy on the up, a unified government under Boris is a prize worth fighting for. – The Sun says Brexit in Brief Why the next Speaker must be biased – not impartial – Peter Bone MP for ConservativeHome Remain’s farce is with you every single day – Nick Ferrari for the Sunday Express MPs in dock for not delivering on EU poll – Sunday Express editorial An early election won’t sort Brexit mess – Matthew Parris for the Sunday Times (£)