Junk Juncker
EU leaders wanting to keep their project intact need to scrap their pig-headed President Jean-Claude Juncker

THE major obstacle to Britain’s painless divorce from the EU is the spiteful, vengeful buffoon Jean-Claude Juncker.
This puffed-up pygmy President embodies all the Brussels arrogance Brexit voters could no longer stomach.
He knows the EU is in dire straits.
His strategy is not to give a little ground and hope flexibility keeps the remaining members onside.
It is to hijack negotiations, “punish” Britain and hope other nations will be too terrified to leave.
Remember Project Fear?
Angry voters on the Continent will react the same way.
The EU’s political leaders need to swat Juncker aside if they want to stop the whole edifice crumbling.
Fantasist Nicky
DOES Education Secretary Nicky Morgan seriously imagine herself as Prime Minister?
Even after the Brexit verdict she fought against, she’s waffling about the positive case for immigration and backing “some” freedom of movement.
She vaguely calls for “enforcement of our border controls” but says complaining about numbers is “missing the point”.
Someone’s certainly missing the point.
Free movement has sent our population soaring and voters want to end it.
Ms Morgan should engage with the reality of their views — and her own standing.
Suicide cult
JEREMY Corbyn hasn’t changed his mind in 40 years.
Now not even a mass resignation by his own team can convince him to quit and save Labour from extinction.
The old clown has spent a comfortable career pointlessly preaching to the converted at leftie rallies and has no intention of stopping.
He loves the adulation.
He, his cadaverous svengali Seumas Milne and sinister pal John McDonnell are ready to sacrifice a once-great party on the altar of their vanity and the naivety of their latte-drinking fanbase.
Their revolting self-obsession is a betrayal of millions of Labour voters.
Fair to migrants
IT is not fair that EU citizens living, working or studying here face a summer of uncertainty over their futures.
If they are in Britain legally they must be told unequivocally they can stay.
It was disappointing to hear David Cameron offload this decision to his successor.
Any deal with the EU must enshrine residency rights for its citizens already here by a set date.
The same goes for Brits living on the continent.
Many migrants are worried they will be kicked out.
That should be unthinkable, regardless of the future immigration controls Britain has voted for.
The PM should rule it out today, as the Leave leaders did before the Referendum.