the last part of (a) is advisable anyway. We should start to prepare a contingency plan for a no deal.
And it's not surprising she would do (b) try to persuade MPs to support her.
So that's what it's all about.
I also think b) is what she's up to. She's going to run the clock down then put the BRINO deal to the commons at the last minute and hope she's scared the bejesus out of the invertebrates there in.
According to the French woman at Grenoble Airport a few days ago the UK had left the EU and the price for cigarettes to my son was different from that of actual EU members.
I hope you don't find out how naive you're being about No Deal -- or, alternatively, I hope I'm wrong in being wary of it -- but, in either case, it would not be spineless to avoid it given all the expert warnings and in-depth studies that have shown that No Deal would be highly damaging to our economy and prestige.
Debatable, but even were it so, the UK is then free to rebuild with the rest of the world, the EU has no white knight to pick up their pieces. They need to just cope.
A sad indictment of our times that a. The prime minister can be so duplicitous and b. MPs are so remainextremists or frightened they will cave in and agree the worst possible deal that has ever been made in the modern world.
We were France’s ‘White Knight’ back in 1944 when we stood alone.
Our White Knight was the USA and the rest of the Commonwealth so history repeats itself only this time we leave France to stew in it’s own juice with the Germans.
We don't need a white knight. That was the point. Our merchants go out and make UK trade great, our government discusses mutally beneficial trade deals, we progress. Whereas the EU has to find their replacement funding from within.