The only way Theresa May can save her Brexit plan now is to let the British people vote on it
The IndependentSign up to our free Brexit and beyond email for the latest headlines on what Brexit is meaning for the UK Sign up to our Brexit email for the latest insight Sign up to our Brexit email for the latest insight SIGN UP I would like to be emailed about offers, events and updates from The Independent. Free movement of people will end but in its place something rather similar is proposed, called a “mobility framework” to allow UK and EU citizens to continue to work and study in each other’s territories. Baker became the first leading Brexiteer to acknowledge as much in his resignation letter to May when he said: “I acknowledge the parliamentary opinion and arithmetic which constrain the government’s freedom of action.” The European Research Group, the organising vehicle for Baker’s group of hard Brexiteers, has no plan on what they will do given they lack support in parliament for their kind of Brexit. Theresa May jeered in House of Commons after Davis and Johnson resignations For those who have argued for a different course altogether – like me – the notion that what the prime minister is proposing is “soft”, given it offers nothing for service industries which make up a majority of the UK economy, is fanciful. They say the proposals “would amount to the British government tying the hands of British business” and instead urge MPs to get behind cross-party efforts to amend the government’s Trade and Customs Bills to, at the very least, insist the government aim for continued participation in the EU customs union if Brexit happens.