Almost three years have passed since Britain voted to leave the European Union, and yet we are still no closer to a Brexit resolution than we were on that June morning. No one is in control and this country’s whole system of governance is creaking. We are in an interregnum that shows no sign of ending.
What is remarkable about this moment in our history is that something must break the impasse. This means that, although Theresa May’s deal suffered the biggest defeat ever for a piece of government business and was defeated a second time by a three-figure margin, it is not dead yet.
Many cabinet ministers, including several of those who are very critical of May, think there is a chance that the deal will pass at the third time of asking. The theory goes that at the EU summit on Thursday next week, the EU will agree to Brexit being delayed but impose conditions.
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