Lord Beria3 wrote:
The 48 letters, by contrast, refers to an internal Tory party procedure. It is a political high-wire act because it will lead, by necessity, to one of two extreme results. It will either destroy May, or massively strengthen her.
Wrong. Winning by one vote does not massively strengthen her. It leaves her as Prime Minister, but on her knees.
A new leader may find it easier to sell the deal as a fait accompli - an agreement that is not great, but good enough.
Who the hell is writing this? The deal cannot be sold to the commons
at all. It's DEAD, Beria. Parliament is simply not going to ratify a deal which gives away that much sovereignty, for so little in return.
Ain't. Gonna. Happen.
In a desperate attempt to secure support for her deal, May is now seeking - and likely to obtain - a legally-binding statement by the European Council. We do not think this will be enough.
Nothing like enough.
We think it is possible that a new leader might shift the red lines, for example by proposing a Norway deal
Didn't eurointelligence rule this out last week?
But, in the end, we believe the UK parliament will face that binary choice. Alternative options, like the second referendum or another deal, will then no longer be on the menu.Â
This is wrong. The Grieve amendment means that it is highly likely that the UK parliament will rule out no deal, so the binary choice will actually be between deal and no brexit. And no brexit will beat her deal.