On the comparison with the Scottish referendum, had the vote been yes, negotiations on the detail would have had to follow, and legislation would have been needed to put the split into effect. But the vote was no, so no legislation or other parliamentry action is needed - things just stay as they are. But the EU vote was to leave. There was never any doubt that parliament would have to pass laws to put that into effect. All the judgement has done is say that parliament must also agree to trigger article 50. All that aside, some of the comments here are verging on the bizarre- nothing that has happened is even remotely close to anything like a fascist regime. I'm an avid remainer but the "advice" from the majority, albeit a small majority, was to leave. It's unlikely that the EU will give us all we want out of a soft brexit (in particular both free market access and immigration controls) so if parliament demands that, the govt. just won't be able to do what the voters asked for. Grist to the mill for the next UKIP election campaign, and goodness knows what else from the most recalcitrant leavers.