Brexit continues to divide Britain
Britons dreading life outside Europe will rally from all corners to London Saturday to try to stop their country's looming breakup with the EU.
The march on parliament is set to be a noisy and festive affair uniting tens of thousands in the seemingly hopeless task of convincing Prime Minister Theresa May to hold a second Brexit referendum. Even dogs are coming. Organizers of the so-called People's Vote March are asking people to dress up their favorite pets in costumes so that they could bark along the scenic route through the historic heart of London.
The message itself will be serious: The Brexit its supporters promised ahead of the June 2016 referendum that set the divorce in motion looks nothing like the one being negotiated today.
Campaigners say they would have voted differently had they known the true costs involved.
"It's time the great silent and not-so-silent majority made their feelings known about Brexit," anti-Brexit activist Gina Miller wrote in The Independent newspaper.
"We must shout with one voice: 'Not in my name!'"
The pro-EU newspaper's online petition demanding a binding vote on any deal agreed before the March deadline has been signed nearly a million times.
The British premier has made it abundantly clear that she has no intention of allowing a do-over.
"They now want a second referendum to go back to the British people and say 'Oh, we're terribly sorry – we think you've got it wrong,'" May told parliament on Wednesday.
"There'll be no second referendum. The people voted and this government will deliver on it."
Yet what May's government is actually delivering is not entirely clear.
The alternatives facing Britain at the moment range between a clean break without any agreement and one in which little changes except for London losing its voice in the EU. (AFP)