Daily Express

Stephen Pollard

- Political commentato­r

this from the EU’s supporters abroad. It’s another seeing it here after a referendum in which more people voted to leave the EU than have ever voted for any government.

There are many honourable Remainers who have accepted the result and knuckled down to making Brexit a success. But there are also many who from day one have made it their mission to undermine the result and do whatever they can to prevent Brexit.

Some of them are even in the Cabinet. Take the Chancellor of the Exchequer. Philip Hammond has been attacked for joining in the squabbling that has broken out in recent weeks over possible strategies for Brexit.

Rightly so. Such rows are more suitable to the school playground than the Cabinet.

But it’s not just the fact of the squabbling that is damaging, it’s the substance from the Remainers masqueradi­ng as ministers committed to Brexit. In reality the likes of Philip Hammond have been doing their level best to frustrate it.

This is a cross-party effort. Across both main parties, Remainers talk of continued membership of the single market, the need to stay in the customs union and having lengthy transition arrangemen­ts

YOU can bet your bottom euro on the supposed two year transition period being the starting point rather than the conclusion if they get their way. Because the real agenda is to get round Brexit for as long as possible and in as many ways as possible. Their hope is that the longer we carry on as we are now the greater the possibilit­y that Brexit can be stopped.

Take the idea that the European Court of Justice (ECJ) should continue to have power over British courts and Parliament. This has been suggested in relation to the rights of EU citizens living here.

We voted to leave the EU so that we can once again become a self-governing nation. That means, among other things, British judges deciding British law. Removing ourselves from the power of the ECJ is central. Nothing better illustrate­s how Remainers seek to undermine Brexit than the idea of the ECJ still having jurisdicti­on here.

All of this emanates from the belief that Brexit cannot be allowed to happen and that bit by bit it can be undermined. And it is played out in spirit, if not actually in coordinati­on, with the Remainers’ EU counterpar­ts.

Take the huge queues at airports that have recently started to become a regular travel hazard for holders of non-Schengen passports.

This isn’t a deliberate attempt to warn us of what lies in store when we leave (even as EU members we are still not members of Schengen and so are also caught in the queues) but the woefully understaff­ed passport controls and hours of waiting certainly play into the threats of post-Brexit travel chaos.

This is only just the beginning. The Remainers will not let up – ever.

So prepare for worse.

‘Remainers fighting to undermine Brexit’

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