In politics you soon learn not to look at what politicians say, but at what they do.
Theresa May said ‘Brexit is Brexit’. But she did not mean it. It wasn’t so much her delay in triggering Article 50 – the Remain crowd on Twitter are wrong about this – every Brexit person in Vote Leave planned to delay Article 50 until Britain was ready with her plan in place. No, rather it was Theresa May’s stated desire to keep freedom of movement, bow the knee to Brussels and accept what the people voted to reject as the price of free trade.
The leaders of Vote Leave know that we do not have to accept free movement as we hold all the negotiating cards. The plan – and yes, there is one – is to repeal the 1972 European Communities act; to withdraw from the Lisbon Treaty, and to regain the supremacy of the two sets of UK law over the ECJ, making it clear that British judges are no longer bound by European law. That is the Brexit plan, and it will be delivered before Article 50 is trigged. Article 50 is not the essential part of freeing us from the EU.
A one-line bill repealing the 1972 Act has already been prepared. But Theresa May intends to scupper that.
May wants us to stay shackled to the EU. She does not have the people with her, but she does have MPs. Specifically, she has Remain MPs, the quotes from whom I shall excerpt at the end of this piece. With the exception of Nicky Morgan, a solid Remain heavyweight, all the major Remain MPs in Parliament have declared for May; and on social media, the leading lights of Remain are mustard keen on her, thinking that she will stifle the people’s will and overturn the Brexit EU Referendum.
The front-runner has traditionally, however, not won the crown. And I believe and hope it will be the same way again. A separate article will explore the two Leave candidates and the one committed ‘People’s Will’ Remainer – Stephen Crabb – and what they have to offer. The absolutely vital thing will be that Brexit’s allies unite to deny Theresa May the leadership – and that the Tory press continue to publish articles about her disastrous spell as Home Secretary, which included her shameful backing for the anti-woman Sharia Law courts.
A word on Mrs. May. In politics, and particularly over Brexit, the greatest issue of our generation, it is vital to fight for what you believe to be true and right. This goes for Remainers and Leavers. It is why appeals to ‘friendship’ and ‘loyalty’ are embarrassing to the point of childishness. I believed that I was and am a loyal supporter of David Cameron and George Osborne, whom I think of as a truly great Prime Minister and Chancellor of historic brilliance. They may not think so, as I threw myself into the Brexit campaign attacking their positions – but never I hope, their character. Theresa May has done wonders for the Conservative party in politics. She was not a good Home Secretary but she has done wonders in other ministerial jobs. She brought women into Parliament, including me, but more to the point, including both Priti Patel and Andrea Leadsom. Theresa May is the mother of she-dragons! As such she deserves respect and gratitude. She is still being berated for her truly correct ‘Nasty Party’ observation. She laid a foundation for a transformed conservative majority under David Cameron and a generation of Thatcher’s daughters in the House.
I am, indeed, deeply concerned with the prospect of her Premiership, but only because I fundamentally believe in Brexit with every cell in my body. I do not want the Tory leadership battle to devolve into attacks on character. But I will attack the politics of Theresa who, as I have argued, puts the ‘May’ in ‘Remain’.
Let’s take a look at who is backing Theresa and how. Chris Grayling – a Leaver, one of the Magnificent Seven. But not one of the loudest Leave voices in the battle we have just fought. There are some true Leave champions with Theresa: David Jones MP and Lucy Allan MP. But more to the point, every one of Remain’s loudest and hardest supporters has flung themselves behind Theresa with a desperation that should sound five alarm fires to any Conservative who wants Brexit.
Mr Clarke said he could be convinced to support Theresa May but urged “cautious” negotiations with Brussels over the EU exit.
Clarke has savaged Michael Gove and Boris Johnson.
Edwina Currie:
The woman who mocked the idea of sovereignty is all in for Theresa May
So #Boris totally failed to #TakeControl, didn't he? Can't say I'm surprised. #TheresaMay2016 now please, no more shenanigans
— Edwina Currie (@Edwina_Currie) June 30, 2016
Nope. Brutus came to a sad end. #TheresaMay2016 please https://t.co/NEblX4gTcw
— Edwina Currie (@Edwina_Currie) June 30, 2016
Anna Soubry:
The most pro-EU sitting MP apart from Ken Clarke, Soubry backs May:
Theresa May has the qualities our country needs. A proven track record of calm competent leadership…..
— Anna Soubry MP (@Anna_Soubry) June 30, 2016
Amber Rudd:
Batted for Remain in the TV debates: ardently for Theresa May
To build a One Nation society and deal with challenges ahead, we need a strong, experienced leader. I'm backing @TheresaMay2016 for next PM.
— Amber Rudd MP (@AmberRudd_MP) June 30, 2016
Matt Hancock:
In turbulent times we need strong, steadfast leadership – here's my piece on why I'm backing Theresa May #TM4PM https://t.co/Lowdo1EY63
— Matt Hancock (@MattHancockMP) July 1, 2016
Andrew Griffiths:
Why it has to be Theresa for PM @TheresaMay2016 https://t.co/jEFJgdB1Aq
— Andrew Griffiths (@agriffithsmp) July 2, 2016
John Howell MP (leading Conservatives In) -RTed
Today I launch my campaign to be our next PM. Please read & share my vision of a country that works for everyone: https://t.co/TqTTz0hlIz TM
— Theresa May (@theresa_may) June 30, 2016
Rehman Chisti:
Excellent meeting with @TheresaMay2016 will be backing her for Leader of party & PM can unite our Country Party & provide strong Leadership
— Rehman Chishti (@Rehman_Chishti) July 1, 2016
Brandon Lewis:
Theresa May picks up more high-profile backing as she steals a march on Gove in race to be Prime Minister https://t.co/SJH8N8N6Yi
— Brandon Lewis MP (@BrandonLewis) July 1, 2016
Alan Duncan:
“She does not do any stitch-up deals behind the scenes – you get what you see” says Alan Duncan on Theresa May https://t.co/4OYsV6fqs6
— DailySunday Politics (@daily_politics) June 30, 2016
Conservatives In
Theresa May today outlined why Great Britain is safer in a reformed European Union. #StrongerIn pic.twitter.com/8E9tMo26sq
— ConservativesIN (@ConservativesIN) April 25, 2016
Stronger In (hooh boy)
Stronger In’s account shows that Theresa May was not a “Reluctant Remainer” at all. She was full on for Remain since Cameron’s disastrous deal in February, which she defended. The first tweet below dates from February:
Theresa May: “EU is far from perfect" but "on balance it is in the national interest to remain a member of the European Union" #UKinEU
— Open Britain (@Open_Britain) February 20, 2016
Home Secretary Theresa May is clear: Britain is #StrongerIn Europe pic.twitter.com/XJe54bx4VT
— Open Britain (@Open_Britain) March 10, 2016
For security, for trade, for our economy – Theresa May is clear that Britain is #StrongerIn Europe pic.twitter.com/tn327IFIuo
— Open Britain (@Open_Britain) April 24, 2016
These tweets are from April:
Staying in the EU means we’re SAFER from crime and terrorism, says Home Secretary Theresa May. pic.twitter.com/aGYKnOhyKA
— Open Britain (@Open_Britain) April 25, 2016
Further, May campaigned round the country, contrary to reports:
Theresa May campaigning #remain outside Maidenhead station #EUreferendum
— Becky Wellavise (@beckywellavise) June 23, 2016
For once I'm in agreement with Theresa May #StrongerIn #Remain #LDInTogether pic.twitter.com/PuVMX64jBx
— Robert Gallen (@jabithew) June 23, 2016
Home Secretary stops off in Stourbridge in final push for Remain campaign: HOME Secretary Theresa May made a … https://t.co/81PE1PWCJG
— Stourbridge News (@StourbridgeNews) June 22, 2016
Home Secretary Theresa May visiting hairbrush manufacturer in Bangor campaigning for Remain pic.twitter.com/wS3dYhcpWZ
— Mark Devenport (@markdevenport) June 21, 2016
Home Secretary Theresa May visited the New Inn in Gloucester for the #Remain campaign – hear about it on Drive at 5 pic.twitter.com/OwfiOhaBVI
— BBC Radio Glos (@BBCGlos) June 13, 2016
Strong line-up for #remain with @stroud_neil @RichardGrahamMP @AlexChalkChelt and Theresa May in #Gloucester pic.twitter.com/pB3kER3yBe
— Out&AboutWithNeilMP (@aboutwithneilmp) June 13, 2016
Now let us look at what Remain’s prominent social media supporters say. They think May will free them from Brexit:
Brexit: LSE expert says EU referendum was a 'draw' and UK exit will not happen https://t.co/seFB6cn2zD
— Martin Cleaver (@mcleaver) July 2, 2016
Britain will probably remain. Theresa May knows this. She also knows fortune does not favour the vocal campaigner. pic.twitter.com/eT7sr5KyWA
— Ben (@Jamin2g) May 28, 2016
Pleased Gove has put his hat into ring > hope he splits eurosceptics in half & paves the way for Remain Theresa Mayhttps://t.co/3jsfzglCIe
— Saif Rahman (@SaifRRahman) June 30, 2016
Remain literally hope Theresa will save them:
Let's get #TheresaMaySaveUs trending!
@TheresaMay4PM #TheresaMay #TheresaMayForPM
First glimmer of hope in a very dark week #Remain— Zoe Nelson (@ZoeNelsonZN) June 30, 2016
Of all the terrifying things I thought I'd ever say, "Theresa May becoming Prime Minister is our only hope" is not one of them #Remain
— Jez Kemp (@jezkemp) June 30, 2016
https://twitter.com/RupertMyers/status/748424365188976640
https://twitter.com/RupertMyers/status/749283389409198080
Media Luvvies and Labour Remainers for Theresa Remain:
Alastair Campbell
I just did @CNN discussion with this chap/ got very clear sense Theresa May has a plan. Unlike Gove, Dacre, Murdoch https://t.co/3yuKH49FTk
— Alastair Campbell (@campbellclaret) June 30, 2016
John Rentoul:
A statement from our next prime minister. This is clear, sensible and centrist https://t.co/uhimY0qsMF
— John Rentoul (@JohnRentoul) June 30, 2016
Dan Hodges:
Think about it. Theresa May isn't even PM yet, and already the Tory headbangers are accusing her of a betrayal over Europe.
— (((Dan Hodges))) (@DPJHodges) July 2, 2016
Hugo Rifkind:
@fionalaird Oooh. Should. I think it's May.
— Hugo Rifkind (@hugorifkind) June 30, 2016
David Aaronovitch:
@timmitchell55 That wasn't where this thread started, which was with attempt to portray Theresa M as a Muslim-loving pinko. @PedroPeros
— David Aaronovitch (@DAaronovitch) July 2, 2016
You rang, David?
People wondering what a sectarian mindset is should read this. https://t.co/728bV1aYTJ
— David Aaronovitch (@DAaronovitch) July 1, 2016
David Allen Green:
Curious. https://t.co/XFUGi8ZkKc
— David Allen Green (@DavidAllenGreen) July 2, 2016
Finally the odious Christopher Cook makes my point on MPs for me: a picture is worth a thousand words.

Now, once again: in this article I have cited the support for Theresa May of many politicians and journalists who are my friends (I hope they are still my friends). But they are all ardent Remain activists to a man and woman. It is not a criticism of Theresa May or them as people that I invoke, but what David Aaronovitch calls ‘sectarianism’ (he fails to see the irony in his own refusal to accept the result. When Leave stick to their guns it is sectarian, when Remain do it it is courage). Brexit for me is a vital piece of self-determination that a politician ought not to be allowed to thwart. I do not in fact think Theresa May will utterly thwart Brexit – it would be suicide, and she would be unable to command her MPs. Many previously Remain Tory MPs, like Sajid Javid, are now fully committed Brexiters because they do indeed accept the will of the people. Stephen Crabb is another – a Remainer I would trust to Brexit.
Theresa May will, however, give us the least effective version of Brexit, some crap that burdens us while allowing us only a modicum of freedom. On these grounds she must be defeated, and it is up to Gove, Leadsom, Crabb, and Fox, and the two most important kingmakers in Parliament, Sajid Javid and George Osborne, to stop her. Boris Johnson is a wild card. I pray that he remains the people’s champion, fights May and stays true to his word to Britain, whatever his desires for revenge may be. Politics is a long, long game. He may be Prime Minster yet, as may George Osborne, but they must execute the people’s Brexit, and stop Theresa May from shackling a reluctant Britain to the rotting corpse of Jean-Claude Juncker’s EU.