A second referendum is very unlikely to happen. In other countries e.g. Canada re the Quebec independence referendum the side that was lucky enough to win the first vote pulled out the "keep going until you get the result you need" card and called it "neverendum"
Obviously it's a shit argument as over time, more facts about what is achievable come out, campaign lies are exposed, the situation and objectives change and therefore the public are voting on different issues with a different level of understanding so it's not the same vote, but those who edged it first time round will make the argument anyway.
However with 8 Tories having resigned since May came up with the soft Brexit Chequers plan, a 6% fall in support for the Tories in a month and a potential leadership challenge in the air, it's looking increasingly likely that Brexit will flounder and the worst of all worlds is a limbo situation where nothing can be achieved either way. And that is the real problem IMO.
As regards a referendum, I think that the only useful and moreover unquestionable one would be a referendum wherein ALL British citizens are allowed to vote on a specific plan or negotiated position rather than another airy fairy concept that nobody fully understands or has been agreed in principle by all parties including the EU. To achieve this, the Government would have to go to the EU and negotiate a position with the caveat that it would be run by the people.
The referendum would then list the agreed-in-principle points e.g. Customs Union, continued free movement etc - probably a list of a dozen or so bullet points and then ask the people to vote Yes or No on each point.
Although it would be very unlikely that the whole plan would be accepted "as is" in it's entirety, it would provide a clear and unequivocal picture of what people want that the Government could take back to the EU.
When that is done, and the Government has attempted to renegotiate the points that us Brits don't agree with (the baby in the bathwater) - and only those points - and if the EU won't agree to them, then the Government would rightly be able to say that they are not achievable and it's the EU's fault which the British public would be more likely to accept.
However, whilst they continue to bundle up lots of different aspects of the deal and give the people a choice of "all or nothing" then the limbo situation will continue as nobody will be happy with it.
Obviously it's a shit argument as over time, more facts about what is achievable come out, campaign lies are exposed, the situation and objectives change and therefore the public are voting on different issues with a different level of understanding so it's not the same vote, but those who edged it first time round will make the argument anyway.
However with 8 Tories having resigned since May came up with the soft Brexit Chequers plan, a 6% fall in support for the Tories in a month and a potential leadership challenge in the air, it's looking increasingly likely that Brexit will flounder and the worst of all worlds is a limbo situation where nothing can be achieved either way. And that is the real problem IMO.
As regards a referendum, I think that the only useful and moreover unquestionable one would be a referendum wherein ALL British citizens are allowed to vote on a specific plan or negotiated position rather than another airy fairy concept that nobody fully understands or has been agreed in principle by all parties including the EU. To achieve this, the Government would have to go to the EU and negotiate a position with the caveat that it would be run by the people.
The referendum would then list the agreed-in-principle points e.g. Customs Union, continued free movement etc - probably a list of a dozen or so bullet points and then ask the people to vote Yes or No on each point.
Although it would be very unlikely that the whole plan would be accepted "as is" in it's entirety, it would provide a clear and unequivocal picture of what people want that the Government could take back to the EU.
When that is done, and the Government has attempted to renegotiate the points that us Brits don't agree with (the baby in the bathwater) - and only those points - and if the EU won't agree to them, then the Government would rightly be able to say that they are not achievable and it's the EU's fault which the British public would be more likely to accept.
However, whilst they continue to bundle up lots of different aspects of the deal and give the people a choice of "all or nothing" then the limbo situation will continue as nobody will be happy with it.