standards, when there is not, and in terms of thinking that now, well, we can all have a softer, cuddlier brexitthink this just completely fails to cope with the realities of it. i think there are two positions you could take on brexit, both of which are logically coherent, but neither of which seems to me to represent what most politicians are now saying. one is to say that we really do want to stay in the single market and the customs union, in which case we -- that is effectively being in the european union, and we should confront that fact and maybe have a -- politically, the only way to deal with that is have a second referendum and argue that we should reverse course. francine: do think we will have a second referendum? lord king: that is a political judgment. i have no means to think it. i think it is unlikely, but it is at least a coherent position to say that if we want to stay in the single market and customs union, that we should stay in the european union. the other coherent position is to say no, we have said we will leave. that means, as everyone made clear in the referendum campai