// Their job is to sort out the implementation of it. They should have got rid of anyone who disagreed straight away. //
On which side of this would Boris Johnson be, then? He voted against the deal, then for it, and is now against it (but for most of it).
Also doesn't sorting out the implementation imply disagreement is almost inevitable? Still no excuse for dismissing those who disagree straightaway.
We come back to the same problem: how to achieve Brexit? And can you get enough people to support *your* understanding of how? We are about to find out. It's worth noting that in 2017's edition of Brexit elections, the Tories campaigned on the promise to negotiate a deal with the EU, and didn't do too badly out of it. Yes, they had the line "no deal is better than a bad deal", but there's even division over whether or not this was a bad deal, division on how to improve the present deal -- and, of course, division over whether the Tories even meant that bit in 2017 or not.