The Mail on Sunday

Using EU cash to fund Remain is act of treason

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I have thought for a long time that the Remain camp had been colluding with foreign powers, so I was not surprised to read your report last week that the Government suspects that prominent campaigner­s trying to block Brexit may have been helped by foreign sources. I also wonder if these campaigner­s are bankrolled by the EU?

If someone could find out if EU money had been used to campaign here against leaving the EU, it would be worthy of the highest honour the country can award. For those who are possibly guilty, it would be treason and they should be suitably punished. Mick Ferrie, Mawnan Smith, Cornwall Any MP suspected to have colluded with foreign powers with regard to Brexit to the detriment of the UK and its democratic vote to exit the EU should be arrested and investigat­ed for treason. Remainer MPs have shown themselves to be an utter disgrace to the freedom and democracy of this country.

J. Millard, Bristol

I read in awe last week your devastatin­g pieces by Dan Hodges, David Starkey and Peter Hitchens on the impact of the Supreme Court judgment on our parliament­ary democracy and constituti­on. But there was one thing they didn’t cover. As John Humphrys said recently about the BBC, it’s not just that they have an inherent Left-wing, liberal, anti-Brexit bias, but that it seems many don’t really realise it. I’m sure the same could be said of the 11 judges, who I’d bet my shirt all voted Remain.

Roy Daniels, Luton

Thank you for the excellent and informativ­e articles by Andrew Roberts, Peter Hitchens and David Starkey, which should be compulsory reading for all those in the opposition parties and the disloyal members of the Conservati­ve Party. Possibly also the 11 judges, but I suppose they are too biased to be reading The Mail on Sunday.

Tony Freshwater, Fowey, Cornwall

Brexit has been divisive and protracted. It has brought about numerous resignatio­ns and also created nasty exchanges in Parliament. Theresa May made a lot of mistakes but Boris Johnson’s hard line has not helped. Casting aside distinguis­hed MPs was a mistake. Shutting down Parliament for five weeks was excessive and the Supreme Court was right to declare this unlawful. Nick Fletcher, Malton, North Yorkshire I don’t know why Sir John Major keeps giving his anti-Brexit views to the media as if he had been a successful Prime Minister. His government was so unpopular that it made the Tories unelectabl­e for 13 years after he left office. When they were eventually elected again in 2010, it was a Conservati­ve and Lib Dem coalition government. Sir John is in no position to hand out political advice.

A. Wills, Ruislip, Middlesex

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