One reader believes the public shouldn't be fooled by Nigel's calls for a second Brexit referendum.

Nobody should be conned by Nigel Farage's sudden seeming desire to entertain a second referendum because he believes the leave vote would be more emphatic and it would finally settle the issue.

Mr Farage is just reaping attention from his typical gung ho 'Brexit at any cost' category of supporters because he knows PM May, Corbyn and many of the political career MPs who voted to trigger Article 50, albeit totally opposed to leaving, are too scared to reject the so called 'will of the people' vote in a referendum where there was no proper leave manifesto or strategy on the table.

There shouldn't necessarily be a second referendum. However if this whole madness doesn't fall flat on its face naturally throughout the negotiations, there should at least be a proper vote in the Commons if and when a final deal is cobbled together on the terms of that deal. Surely the Brexiteers cannot oppose that because, after all, it was 'the retention of our Parliament's sovereignty' that was a key soundbite and plank in their vacuous 'leave' agenda.