Day6, regarding your post @ 16:09 today (01/06/19) I believe that we can agree that following the referendum result in 2016 the Palimentery Labour Party did support the passage of the Referendum Bill through Parliament.
However, it rapidly became clear following that action that the leaders of the leave campaign had not thought through how they envisaged Britain leaving Europe following that leave victory. Evidence to that can be witnessed in the statement made by David Davis on becoming the UK's first Brexit Secretary when he recited to the assembled press the now famous lines "these will be the easiest negotiations ever concluded."
Britain then demanded a full tariff-free trade agreement without the free movement of labour. That the European Union could not grant due to the treaties that all twenty-eight members had signed including Britain.
It also soon emerged that leave leaders had also not thought through the amount Britain would be required to pay to Europe even after it withdrew from the EU due to forward commitments and ongoing pension payments etc. How shocked we all were when Theresa May was forced to agree to a figure of thirty-nine billion as a "divorce" settlement bill. That is now also the basis of the court action against Boris Johnson in regard to the three hundred and fifty million savings per week on the side of the Brexit Bus.
So, Day6 I hope we can agree that it has been the total lack of comprehension by this Conservative government in regards to the UK leaving the EU with any agreement that has brought Britain to its present political impasse.
However Day6, I believe that we could have even agreed on Britain leaving the European Union with no agreement whatsoever had the UK began its negotiations with the EU Commissioners three years ago on that basis. In that I mean, had we stated that no deal is our starting position to the EU, and so following that let's all see if we can come up with something better, then Britain may I am sure have been in a much better position than it finds itself in today.
In the above, all industries would have thoroughly prepared over those three years for a "no deal" scenario, and all sides in Parliament would have worked (I believe) towards that outcome as there would be nothing else to seek. However, the above is sadly not the position.
We are now deadlocked in the Parliamentary process on Brexit and as we have both stated Day6, and a new Prime minister entering the scene is unlucky to break that deadlock.
Therefore I believe that only a General Election can have any chance of breaking that political impasse. In that, the electorate would have the opportunity to look at their constituency candidates as to where they stand on Brexit and other matters affecting Britain and elect accordingly to that stance and not just on party allegiances.
So, I hope we can agree further Day6 and others on the forum in the above. I feel that at present, the whole of British democracy is now at stake due to this Brexit crisis and either side using words such as treachery and treason will do nothing to improve the situation.
All that had happened and gone before is now "water under the bridge", and in that clear thought and forward thinking is required now and nothing else.