With a post Brexit economic policy that sets our economy and country on the right track, with new freedoms, the U.K. will exercise greater fiscal flexibility and regulatory reform to transform our country into a dynamic engine of prosperity, job creation and growth.
Priti Patel
There is so much for the U.K. to be proud of - a world-class, modern economy and a free, fair and tolerant society.
The European Union is becoming more economically feeble every year.
Finding out whether I had made the grades for my first choice university course or whether I needed to rethink my future was terrifying.
I campaigned for Brexit because I have always believed that Britain would be stronger, more prosperous and secure outside of the E.U.
When it's well managed, migration works in the national interest, for our communities, economy and country.
The Tory party is at is strongest when it is in tune with the hopes and aspirations of Britain's hard-working, law-abiding majority, and when it governs through clear Conservative principles.
On the Left, there is an emerging nostalgia on for renationalisation as a panacea for all our economic challenges. Every train fare increase, water price rise or electricity rate change triggers a well-orchestrated hue and cry for our essential infrastructure to be taken back into public hands.
With our educated workforce, our language as the international language of commerce, we are ideally geographically located to prepare for success. Following Brexit, we will have the tools at our disposal to take advantage of these attributes, and to benefit from the new opportunities that are emerging around the world.
The countries that succeed will be those that are nimble and able to use their human capital to take advantage of opportunities as they arise.
Free trade is the way to bring jobs and prosperity.
Geoffrey Howe's Budget of 1981 is remembered for transforming the economy and delivering economic freedoms to families and businesses.
We need to create jobs across Africa and provide its growing population with a route out of poverty where they are.
The end of free movement means that we will be able to consider the impact on the existing labour market when determining whether we want unskilled workers from the E.U. to be able to come to the U.K.
The American Revolution was sparked by a series of taxes and tariffs on tea. More recently, the Thatcher and Reagan 'revolutions' were rooted in overturning the status quo - excessive taxation - to empower the individual and encourage a free society and prosperous economy.
London is the only true global capital market in Europe and E.U. companies still need access our large liquid markets.
Embracing the freedom of Brexit gives us the choice of what sort of country we want to become and means we can look forward to a more positive tomorrow.
Our young people are some of the most dynamic and determined in the world.
For centuries our wealth has come from our ambition, entrepreneurial skills and global reach.
Brexit will not be easy.
The challenges of delivering more housing so people can enjoy the benefits of home ownership and improving standards and choice in public services can also be met with a strong Conservative policy agenda.
Conservatives in Government must make the case that lowering the tax burden boosts economic growth and leads to an increase in tax revenues.
The public wants to know that their political leaders will stay true to the promise made to them that Brexit means Brexit.
Crime and violence are a threat to the freedom and liberty people should enjoy and to our orderly way of life.
If your country isn't stable and free from the threat of violence then you can't get to work, you can't get to the local clinic and your children can't go to school.
I know at first-hand the importance of hard work and the value of work experience.
One of the reasons people voted to leave the E.U. is so that we could have the freedom to strike trade deals with countries outside the E.U. Staying locked into the customs union prevents this.
Instead of embracing change, the E.U.'s precautionary principle has held back progress.
Free from the shackles of the E.U. - and an automatic right of entry for their citizens, with or without work - we will be able to give the type of preference to brilliant scientists, academics and highly-skilled workers that we want to see more of.
My father set up his first business in the 1970s so that he could support his family.
When Secretary of State for International Development, it was my mission to ensure that every taxpayer pound was spent to serve those in need, and met U.K. development objectives.
The Single Market and Customs Union is not a true 'free' market. It is designed to suit the E.U. insiders, not the U.K.
The case for open markets, free trade, private investment and technology has never been stronger in development. Over the decades, this combination has driven down poverty, helped to tackle disease, and created jobs across the globe.
The British public cannot be treated like fools.
To deliver Brexit you must believe in it.
Whether it was in the 1980s under Margaret Thatcher, the 1950s under Churchill and Macmillan or in the early days of the Cameron administration, when our party has spoken for the people we have won.
No country has left the E.U. since Greenland in 1985 and no one believes that delivering what the people voted for will be a walk in the park, so it's important that the person ultimately chosen by the party membership is tried and tested, capable of making tough decisions and can lead a team negotiating with E.U. institutions.
We all have legitimate concerns over the way our personal data is used and stored and it is right that there are protections to stop the theft and manipulation of our private information.
I know the value and significance of trading opportunities and have seen myself from Americas to the Far East the power of trade and open markets.
We can do a much better job free of protectionist Europeans.
A dynamic Britain, free from the E.U., can be the greatest force of good in the world.
We are a free and independent country and will prosper if given a proper chance.
One of the things that is great about this country is that we're a meritocracy. Aspirational, hard-working people who want to come here - and who have the talent and skills to contribute to our economy and society - are very welcome.
Britain's generosity in the world has allowed us to help the poorest countries to get on the road to industrialisation through economic development and private sector investment in the world's most difficult frontier markets, where jobs and economic opportunities are desperately needed.
The ability to control our borders stands at the heart of the debate on whether or not Britain should leave the European Union.
The only way to keep the British economy secure is to leave the E.U.
When the world faces its biggest challenges, it looks to Britain to show the strong leadership needed to overcome them.
In times of crisis, the world looks to Britain not just for our work on the ground, but also for our leadership.
Our police officers are on the front line of a battle to maintain control of our streets.
Far from doing what it can to ensure that the companies and entrepreneurs of tomorrow are European, the E.U. actively stifles innovation.