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Is a Gerneral Election the only way to break the Brexit gridlock?

Today MPs voted to extend the Brexit deadline but also voted (by about 80%) not to have a second referendum. May has pretended to offer labour MPs a deal and offered almost nothing, gone back to Brussels to renegotiate what couldn't be renegotiated and failed. Tory MPs voted to have a leadership contest but then voted to (more or less) keep her in place.

Its a PM with no authority, leading a party with no majority trying to deal with a complex historically important issue which nobody in the country can agree on. We can't extend the deadline forever and something has to give. I think eventually there will be some kind of Brexit but not a hard Brexit and nobody will be happy.

The twin truths are that the referendum voted to leave the EU and that there is no mandate to change that. Also that Brexit is more complex than anyone imagined and that it can't deliver what it promised.
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whowasthatmaskedman · 70-79, M
No. And a general election still wont break the deadlock. The truth is that there are more than 2 sides in play here. Labor V Conservative. The Unpalatable V the Un-electable. Plus the money people in Britain and Europe. looking to profit from the chaos (translate "opportunities") a Brexit without an orderly plan will bring. Plus the EU members looking to charge Britain such a hefty price it wont leave. The complexities increase because many players are on more than one side at once. Personally, I go with the profiteers. So I expect a no deal Brexit to triumph.