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Having seen her Brexit proposals rejected in the largest defeat for a sitting government in British parliamentary history, the Prime Minister returned to the House of Commons on Monday with a plan B that looks startling like plan A.
Yes, there have been some tweaks around the edges, such as scrapping the fee for EU citizens living in the UK to remain here and promising to seek changes to the Irish backstop, but her red lines remain vividly scarlet, and in essence it is the same strategy – one that MPs have overwhelmingly thrown out and that the EU has insisted it will not renegotiate.
But what does the public think about all this?
New polling out today from the widely respected political scientist Sir John Curtice debunks any idea that Britain is fed-up of arguing about Brexit, or that public division has softened since the referendum.
By Rachel Cunliffe.
Full story at Cityam

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