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Whether or not Theresa May goes, her Brexit deal is a long way off the Labour support it needs

Is Theresa May safe? It depends on the paper you read. Brexit ultras are either wildly adrift of where they need to be to get 48 names or on the brink of collecting them, depending on who you choose to believe.

The reality is that only one person knows what the state of play is – Graham Brady, the chair of the backbench 1922 committee – and he ain't telling.

We know that the list of MPs who have publicly said that they have signed and sent letters calling for a confidence vote in May is now at 25, but, rather like clicking “attending” on a Facebook invite, we dont know if that really means very much.

​But at risk of sounding like a stuck record, Mays future doesn't matter all that much compared to what happens to the United Kingdom and the Brexit deal. 25 Conservative MPs, plus the ten DUP MPs, means that the government needs to find 28 votes from somewhere among the opposition parties. Add Stephen Lloyd, the only Eurosceptic Liberal Democrat MP, and they need 27 votes. Sylvia Hermon, the independent Unionist MP, has said she might vote for the deal – so optimistically, thats 26 votes from the Labour Party to avoid being defeated over the deal. The Labour Leavers aren't going to play. So whats left?

At that point, May might be forgiven for wishing that the ERG had the numbers to get rid of her after all.

Stephen Bush is special correspondent at the New Statesman, the EI Political Commentator of the Year, and the PSA's Journalist of the Year. His daily briefing, Morning Call, provides a quick and essential guide to domestic and global politics.

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