by the way, this is andrew bridgen, conservative mp. sorry for arriving late.t a fan of mrs may. we will talk to you in a moment. i think the question is, what can mrs may do now? what could the timetable be? how have we got here? here is a quick summary from jim reid. so the brexit deal will not now be voted on in the house of commons as planned. as things stand, we are still meant to be leaving the eu on march 29. nobody is sure what happens next. here though, some possibilities. the prime minister will now visit other eu leaders tasked with changes to her deal, and in particular arrangements for northern ireland. eu officials have said there is no room for big concessions. based on that visit, there should be another vote in parliament, perhaps next week, more likely next year. if the new deal passes, we almost certainly leave the eu in march and move straight into a 21 month transition period. if there is no agreement by march 29, then we could, in theory, leave with no guilt whatsoever. that would mean all eu rules no longer apply and we use wider internat