been going on for hours what are the government s likely options. both of you mentioned locked in and it seems like really the cabinet ministers have been locked into downing street and there are reports that they even don t have the phones until there is a made the prime minister is going to give a statement which we are expecting very soon so the options that they would have been discussing are all options really whether to put three is a maze deal back on the table have parliament here decide one more time before the time whether they would finally accept their deal possibly a second referendum or another process of these so-called indicative votes which is something that some m.p. s would like where m.p. s are trying to take control of the whole process and trying to force the government s hand effectively with most likely a softer version of bragg s and their version of brakes and so all these options they would have been discussed and we re just waiting for that reason made to co
brags of negotiations here she hasn t been able to have a consensus here involvement and get people behind her for her ideas so she has already indicated that she will go one have deal get street that s a big if if a deal ever get three she hasn t said what happens if a deal doesn t answer is she hasn t said that whether she will resign or not in that case it doesn t seem so likely in my opinion that she will at this stage be forced out because the time is just too short to go through a lengthy process of just another leadership election within the conservative party possibly then also followed by a general election all the time while there s no agreement between the u.k. and the european union is also something that brussels most likely would really object to but then again this is just my opinion who knows what s going to happen there are a lot of m.p. s who really don t want to cooperate with her and who would like to
of article fifty say that means to laying bricks at a little bit further and to she get a deal through and this is why she s throwing it to jeremy corbyn to try to find some compromise in a way that they can get it through otherwise she seems to be talking about taking control of these indicative votes that we ve been saying for there was a second got through asia gets nowhere with goes nowhere with jeremy corbyn the end . that will be the next in taking control of these these proposals that have been put forward by m.p. s and again last night and again nothing was agreed to that seems to be her government trying to take control of it because they have that face in the past few days completely lost control of cracks it let s bring in into the conversation berger. who joins us from london so burkett the just listening to the prime minister to resign made with her latest plan it s
a lot of people going to look at this and say one of the biggest problems about bracks it so far has been politicians playing politics with it too because through observer this looks like more of the same this is a saying i want to bring jeremy corbyn into this but if we re going to talk about it it still needs to we. we will focus on the future relationship rather than the current withdrawal deal and the house of commons withdrawal deal so i ll talk but i m not going to talk about the things that you all hate. well i m not so sure fellow i think to reason may has been criticised for a long time for not looking after it looking for a consensus and it s very late in the day to to hold these talks with the labor party but she is saying that she wants to act in the national interest and there has been there have been people who have asked for a government of national unity and basically for her to reach out to the labor party and just find out what it is that they want to do the labor par
argument but we can and must find the compromises that will deliver what the british people voted for this is a decisive moment in the story of these islands and it requires national unity to deliver the national interest. and there she was gone short and sweet there was a british prime minister. the end of hours of a cabinet meeting that has gone on for most of the day saying that the action needs to be taken to break the logjam around brick sits and she s not very much of putting the pressure on the leader of the opposition party jeremy corbyn she wants to sit down with him and see if they can between them come with some sort of deal that would focus on the future relationship would deliver the result of the