lemongrove, Quote [ Well, they won’t be wasting a month now, as T May is safe for another year.
JC can’t count his chickens for quite a while yet, as it’s unlikely there will be a GE.] End Quote
Lemongrove, I feel that your above post could not be further from what is the actual situation. In that, Theresa May still has to obtain significant concessions from the European Union if the withdrawal agreement is to have any chance of being passed by the House of Commons. We already know that the EU are unable to grant the above concessions without breaking their rules and treaties, so, that will not happen.
Therefore I believe that the agreement will be put before parliament in January and will be rejected. Jeremy Corbyn will then I feel bring forward a motion of no confidence in this shambles of a government, and with the threat of Britain crashing out of the EU in a "no deal" situation, that motion will be carried by the House of Commons.
In the above situation, the Conservative party will not be able to form a new government due to the huge rifts within that party. In that, no alternative to a General Election will then be at hand, which would be exactly what Jeremy Corbyn and the Labour Party have wanted throughout this whole crisis.
There would then be also no alternative but to place Article fifty on hold (as the EU have stated Britain can) while that Election is organised and held, in which the Tory party would continue to rip itself apart over Brexit, making them unelectable.
I have to say that I feel that Jeremy Corbyn has played "a blinder" for the Labour Party in the last few weeks, and longstanding grassroots members of the broader Labour movement must be "over the moon" with his leadership of the parliamentary party throughout this crisis.