It's an uncomfortable fact that leaving the European Union in a way that is true to the referendum result is becoming harder and harder to deliver.
Like so many other people in the U.K., I took the chance offered to us in a single question: Should we leave the European Union or remain within it? Following a great deal of thought and thorough analysis, the answer I arrived at was, 'Yes, we should leave the E.U.'
The U.K. will leave the European Union, freedom of movement will end, and the British parliament will decide how many people come to live here.
Genuinely, as a mum, all the sunlit uplands are when we leave the European Union.
Here we have the Schengen agreement, and the truth is that for years we trusted each other and set border controls on the outer borders of the European Union. And as was the case with the economic and monetary union, with this step, regarding the management of the Schengen area, we did not go all the way in terms of political solutions.
We've stated very clearly that no negotiating chapters between the European Union and Turkey will be concluded before the Ankara Protocol is complied with: that's to say before Turkey grants all E.U. member states, including Cyprus, access to its ports.
We believe that from both a German and a Polish perspective, it is desirable for Great Britain to remain in the European Union.
I personally hope and wish that Britain will stay part and parcel of the European Union.
We work well together with the United Kingdom - particularly, perhaps, when we talk about new rules for the European Union.