AS time increasingly runs out on an agreed Brexit deal, Downing Street has informed the media that only a "small number of outstanding issues remain to be settled", perhaps one of the great under statements of our time.

It appears, even from the standpoint of the most optimistic observer, that the chances of a chaotic no-deal departure from the EU continue to increase by the hour, an alarming prospect for everyone in this country, particularly since there appears to be an unprecedented political leadership vacuum in the country at large.

The Cabinet is hopelessly divided, though the one thing that they all seem to agree on is that whatever form Brexit will now take, the outcome will be much worse for Britain than the original status quo.

Mrs May literally has "cannon to the left of her and cannon to the right of her" amongst her own supporters. Beset by malevolent Brexiters and the DUP on one side and, following Jo Johnson's resignation ("New blow for May as sixth minister resigns over Brexit", The Herald, November 10), by increasingly frustrated Remainers on the other side, the Prime Minister's chances of winning a parliamentary vote on a current deal look negligible at best.

Her parliamentary opposition offers no reasonable respite for her or for the country as Jeremy Corbyn's Brexit stance remains perplexing and ambiguous; a genuine dilemma for his party colleagues and supporters. In short, the Labour Party remains in turmoil over the greatest British political crisis since the Second World War, shorn of any decisive guidance or authority.

In 2016, the Brexiters won the referendum by peddling the illusion that the UK could leave the EU while continuing to enjoy its benefits. Today's reality is that whatever deal Mrs May and her team can now fashion will leave us all considerably worse off than we were and affect generations of Britons to come detrimentally.

John Maynard Keynes famously said: "When the facts change, I change my mind.”

Even allowing for the Trumpesque nature of the Brexit campaign where it is clear that many "facts" were never facts at all, it should not take a great flight of imagination to take the path of a second referendum for the UK. A second referendum would not affront democracy, it would fortify and reinvigorate it.

Owen Kelly,

8 Dunvegan Drive, Stirling.