Most respondents clearly believe it is wrong for the Government to offer MPs a means of effectively taking it off the table before the end of this month.
The core of the Trade Secretary’s argument is that other countries will move fast once they know whether there’s a UK-EU deal or not.
She also says that Labour “respects the referendum result” but that the party rejects No Deal.
“The risk of her deal is that we leave in circumstances whereby we don’t know what we’re getting.”
He says it would be difficult and that there would be turbulence – but that plenty of preparation has been done.
She says that many Labour MPs share her concern about respecting the referendum result.
“It would be ridiculous to reject this opportunity for these uncertain and worse futures.”
The most natural reading of this finding is that an emphatic majority of Party members want to leave the EU on time.
The Defence minister tells the BBC that “it is not something that we can contemplate”.
I’m told that one aggravation was the feeing that the MP was trying to downplay support for a second referendum.
Tory difficulties are bound up with Brexit. Labour’s stretch wider, and are part of wider ones for social democratic and democratic socialist parties.
As Number Ten mulls extending Article 50, local activists should follow the lead of the National Convention.
Plus: No, the Trump-Kim Jong Un summit wasn’t altogether a failure. And: Costa should get his old job back.
The former Agriculture Minister spells out why he has resigned from the Government today over the possible planned delay to Brexit.