Thank you very much.
You said a few times now that prorogation was necessary so that the government could work on the speech. How many people were working on this speech? What do you think government would...? What jobs would the government have been doing, if Parliament were sitting, that it didn't do during prorogation? What I'm hearing is that proroguing meant that the government was off the hook for all sorts of work that otherwise would have kept it so busy that it couldn't have written a half-hour speech.
What were the things the government wasn't doing while prorogation was in effect, so that you were able to commit so much time and resources to this apparently momentous speech?