The options put before us in the wake of last year’s referendum were as follows: (1) a hard Brexit, in which we secured a minimalist deal that sorted out the issue of citizens’ rights and pretty well nothing else; (2) a soft Brexit, allowing us to rent space in the Single Market and the Customs Union while giving up up our seats on the European Commission, the European Council, the Court of Justice and the Strasbourg parliament; or (3) No Deal, leading to a state of undeclared war between the UK and its closest neighbours and major trading partners.
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Is Britain negotiating to fail?
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The options put before us in the wake of last year’s referendum were as follows: (1) a hard Brexit, in which we secured a minimalist deal that sorted out the issue of citizens’ rights and pretty well nothing else; (2) a soft Brexit, allowing us to rent space in the Single Market and the Customs Union while giving up up our seats on the European Commission, the European Council, the Court of Justice and the Strasbourg parliament; or (3) No Deal, leading to a state of undeclared war between the UK and its closest neighbours and major trading partners.