 The fundamental issue right at the heart of the whole thing is that in the referendum the British people voted clearly to leave the European Union and you have well over 300 members of parliament who have never accepted that decision, never want us to leave under any circumstances whatsoever, and have spent three years doing everything they can to frustrate the decision of the people. I mean Mark, I mean Mark, I mean Mark, I mean Mark, I mean Mark, I mean Mark, that is the absolute heart of the matter. Mark, I love this song too and I've heard you play it multiple times. Well it's true. I think there are many issues at hand that one there is a tension between direct democracy and representative democracy and that grey area has never been sorted out by any government. Really? That is a huge part of why we are where we are. Remember this, this is the booklet that went through every door. I love that you've come prepared, oh my god. Well I took you seriously right? This is the booklet. He bought his own work. £9.2 million of British taxpayer's money, it went through every door in the country before the referendum. It said on the final page, this is a once in a generation decision and then it said this, this is very clear English, this is your decision, the government will implement what you decide. Hang on, hang on, hang on, hang on, hang on, hang on, hang on, hang on, hang on, hang on, hang on, hang on. I'm finished, I'm finished, I'm finished. My homework as you said, kindly put in. Go on, guess on. This was the decision that the British people were allowed to take, they voted to leave and people like you will never, ever accept it. Won't I? No. So look, I voted for a man, but I also thought that a soft Brexit compromise would be legitimate because you're right, people voted to leave. But I see your leaflet and I raise you the principle of parliamentary sovereignty. It's in the hands of Parliament to put together a deal. But look, if you're saying that parliamentary sovereignty is drawn from the electorate, which I agree with, it means that you have to take the fact that the electorate elected a hung parliament in 2017, which is a mandate for compromise, and this is the tension I'm talking about. It's a deep constitutional matter which can't be resolved by a leaflet. Any way you spin it, they voted to leave. All right, Mark. But then what about the law passed by Parliament, and if you're talking about parliamentary sovereignty in a hung parliament that is compelling the Prime Minister to ask the EU for an extension, should he abide by that law? Well, the law was passed by a group of MPs whose sole objective is to keep us in the European Union at any cost. Well, it was passed by Parliament. I have a Parliament as sovereign or it's not. Well, ultimately, who elects these MPs, the people? It's sovereign or it's not. Well, who took the decision? That's a leaflet. Parliament as sovereign or it's not. No, it's not just a leaflet. It's about democracy. All right.