take your useless deal and your crappy Trumpesque populism with you! Anyone who saw your pathetic attempts to "connect" with so called ordinary people during the campaign for your pointless and totally unsuccessful, from your point of view, General Election in 2017 must realise that you are not "one of us" and never will be. Hopefully, people will see right through your my way or the high way intransigence and you will not be able to batter Parliament into submission with your unimaginative and dangerous threats and insults.

I can only talk about my own feelings about Parliament's role in the Brexit farce - no doubt others will feel differently, but here's what I think.

I voted to Remain, but my attitude from the moment the result was confirmed was that we should honour the Referendum result and leave the EU with my preference being for what has come to be known as a soft Brexit. I notice that Leave politicians and May loyalists in the Government are now talking as if the ballot paper for the Referendum was not just a straightforward yes or no choice, but it also contained the wording that we should leave the EU on 29 March 2019 in the event of Remain being defeated - I can only say that I never saw any such date on the ballot paper I used when voting.

There is also now talk from some in the May supporting camp who are speaking in terms of a soft Brexit not being what the 17.4 million voted for - excuse my French, but how the f*ck do they know that?

In fact, I would venture to suggest that if remaining in the EU or a second Referendum were removed as options, the overwhelming majority of the 16.1 million who voted to stay in Europe would opt for a soft Brexit and when you add in those from the Leave voters who always favoured such an approach, then you'd have a large majority of the voting public who backed it over the hard Brexit or no deal options.

That is only my opinion, but, if I'm right, then what needs to be said as a result is that the wording on the ballot paper back in 2016 carried an implication that Parliament should be trusted to sort out the fine details of any leaving procedure and deliver it if and when it had agreed that the terms for doing so were in the best interests of the UK. This may be a long, tortuous project but, with the House of Commons being full of people who the public had voted in at least a year after the Referendum (surely anybody whose voting intentions were entirely based on how their MP voted in the Referendum could have found this information out and voted against a Remainer or vice versa?), the public expectation must surely have been that they would eventually deliver a Brexit that the majority could accept?

Yesterday the two leaders of the main parties again showed that they are simply not up to the job at this seminal time in British politics. May's histrionics, delivered in the manner of an officious head mistress lecturing a bunch of twelve year olds, was totally inappropriate and it may just be that she has turned waverers who might have been coming around to voting for her deal into implacable enemies again, but just as bad was Jeremy Corbyn's exit from the meeting of party leaders called by the Prime Minister because Chuka Umunna was there as a representative of the Independent group. Labour under Corbyn are still refusing to send official spokespersons to television shows this week to discuss the day's developments as they appear to me to still be trying to be all things to all men and are ending up being the exact opposite.

Yesterday was desperate in many ways, but in the afternoon I saw speeches in Parliament from the likes of Dominic Grieve, Justine Greening and Hilary Benn which along with the actions of the likes of Yvette Cooper https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bv_2gM3_xC8 and Oliver Letwin, reaffirmed my faith that there are MPs from both sides of the house who are genuinely trying to find a way out of this mess in a manner which, I believe the majority of people in this country would back.