Theresa May
But Theresa May is still heading for defeat in Friday's crunch vote.
Leaving the EU without a deal will always be the default outcome, until a Withdrawal Agreement is agreed, or Article 50 is extended to find a solution
The 29th of March, 2019 has finally come. The date will sound familiar, as it’s been repeated over and over again in the last three years as the date when the UK would leave the EU. We remind you of those and other promises, as the Brexit date continues to be delayed.
PM agreed to 'gimmick' to keep backbench Brexiteers happy.
But Labour and DUP signal they will vote against move to chop PM's deal in half.
HuffPost UK's Arj Singh and Paul Waugh sat down with MP Nicky Morgan and the Institute For Government's Maddy Thimont Jack to see whether Theresa May's promise to leave as PM once she delivers Brexit is enough to satisfy everyone. Spoiler: It's not.
MPs demand to know what they will be asked to approve.
With parliament gridlocked, government paralysed, business stalled, jobs lost, households stockpiling, our global reputation trashed, it's the only way out of her dilemma