Thank you very much for providing this.
A couple of thoughts about the whole affair.
1 In the British parliamentary life, there appears to be a planning horizon of five years. No government likes to consider to closely life after the next general election. Any Brexit management commission should surely be all-party to ensure that there is a single, progressive programme with identified objectives.
Agree - see my post on this on the 'Red on Red, Labour implode' thread.
2 I think that we may have seen the last of "the referendum" as a decision making procedure. Referendums (? -da) do not sit comfortably in our model of representative democracy. About 63% of the electorate did not vote in favour of leaving the EU but it cannot be argued that people who took no part in the referendum do not deserve to be considered. There is a case for considering that any change of this importance should be supported by more than 50% of the total electorate before being actioned.
Again you are right, although not sure we've seen the last of referendums.
But this is where a decision needs, independently, to be approved by both parliament and also a referendum (if that is going to be used.
Parliament and MPs should not be bound by a referendum result (indeed in most cases they are advisory) - why because they have to take account of broader considerations, e.g. legality (most obviously) but also they have a duty to consider all people in the UK not just those who voted in the referendum, and certainly not just those who voted a particular way.
So an MPs constituents include everyone living there - so those who voted, those who were on the register but didn't vote, those who were ineligible (e.g. under 18s, non UK EU nationals permanently living here) etc etc.
So while 17 million voted in to leave and 16 million to remain, our population is 65 million, so that means that only 25% of the UK population have voted to leave. MPs need to consider the interests of all 65 million people not just the eligible to vote 46 million, nor the voting 33 million, or even just the leave voting 17 million.