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Second Brexit vote 'deserves to be considered,' senior UK minister says

A day after hundreds of thousands marched in central London to demand another public vote, Chancellor Phillip Hammond said a second referendum, likely to be one of the options put to lawmakers, was a "coherent proposition" that deserves consideration.
Hammond's comments signal a clear break from May's repeated refusal to allow the British public a second poll on Brexit.
Abandon Brexit, say London marchers. But will lawmakers listen?
The Chancellor confirmed parliament would vote on a series of alternative Brexit options this week, and acknowledged that May will be unlikely to salvage her own plan, which lawmakers have already crushed by historic proportions on two occasions.
"One way or another Parliament is going to have the opportunity this week to decide what it is in favor of, and I hope that it will take that opportunity -- if it can't get behind the Prime Minister's deal -- to say clearly and unambiguously what it can get behind," Hammond told Sky News.
"I'm not sure that there's a majority in Parliament for a second referendum but it's a perfectly coherent proposition -- many people will be strongly opposed to it, but it's a coherent proposition and it deserves to be considered along with the other proposals."
MPs could vote as soon as Monday on that and a series of other Brexit alternatives, in an attempt to find a route out of the country's chaotic political standstill before the new April 12 deadline imposed by the European Council on Thursday.
Options are likely to include continued membership of the EU's single market or customs union, a second vote, a Canada-style free trade agreement and a no-deal exit.
Give Brits your sympathy. The British government, not so much
But the chances of May being in office to see any Brexit strategy through are increasingly being thrown into question, with several senior Cabinet ministers reportedly preparing to force a coup when they meet the Prime Minister on Monday.
The Sunday Times newspaper reported that 11 Cabinet ministers -- almost half of her senior government ministers -- are to confront May with an ultimatum, urging her to quit in return for support for her Withdrawal Agreement.
The paper reports that her de facto deputy and close ally David Lidington is being lined up to take over, while The Mail on Sunday says Environment Secretary Michael Gove is the "consensus choice" for the job.
Hammond said such rumors were "self-indulgent." He added: "This is not about the Prime Minister or any other individual, this is about the future of our country.
What happens next with Brexit?
"Changing Prime Minister wouldn't help us, changing the party in government wouldn't help us," he added.
One million people, organizers claimed, marched through London demanding a second referendum on Saturday, and almost 5 million have signed an online petition urging the government to revoke Article 50 and cancel the Brexit process altogether.
Those heightened calls for a so-called "People's Vote" could also provide May's Brexit deal an unlikely lifeline, with some senior opposition figures suggesting they would vote in favor of the plan if it were then put to the people in a confirmatory referendum.
"I will help you get it over the line to prevent a disastrous no deal exit. But I can only vote for a deal if you let the people have a vote on it too," Labour's deputy leader Tom Watson told Saturday's rally.

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