Many who voted remain and want to remain are against another referendum. You even see some on here state so.
You could look at it another way. This so called people's vote. Didn't people vote last time?
Many are of the thought that the vote should stand as it was what was voted for.
What would happen next if the vote was 52% against 48% again but this time for remain? Would it become best of 3? Would it be the result to keep as it is what you want? Should we keep voting until there is a large majority in favour of one side? If it was 52% v 48% in favour of leave again should we have yet another one as only about 2m more wanted leave over remain still?
And as you have said a referendum is democratic. Are you happy to go against a democratic vote?
To me another referendum would cause more problems than it would solve.
Here we go again...
Tell me how a referendum is undemocratic? You can't, unless you want to make an argument against referendums as a whole. Which, if you did, undermines your premise that the 2016 referendum is the be all and end all.
The issue of EU membership won't go away whether or not we leave. If we go through with Brexit, and it goes badly, people will campaign to rejoin the EU, likewise, if we end up remaining, UKIP (or successor party) will certainly be back as a political force at some point. One way or the other, the issue won't go away. Either way, there will be another referendum, if not this year, in 2029, 2039? Who knows.
I'm happy to go against a democratic vote if it is with another, democratic vote. The only rational reason you're opposed to that proposal is that you're afraid Leave would lose. A second referendum could actually do wonders for Brexiteers if Leave won, May would probably be ousted and a more prominent Brexiteer could either renegotiate a deal (v unlikely) or leave without a no-deal.
You're against May's deal, as is most of the Brexiteers, why is a chance to oust May that bad? Surely this is better than sleeping into a 'bad deal'.
Nope. The democratic process is achieved through parties elected on a manifesto commitment and delivering that commitment in their role as elected politicians.
Over 80% of the house were elected by standing on a pledge to honour the result.
You're presenting the issue of a second referendum as a partisan issue between political parties. That's not the case because the opposition to May's deal is coming from within her own party and the opposition. A general election wouldn't, in fact, couldn't be contested alongside the issue of a second referendum. This is because of Remain and Leave is a cross-cutting issue along both major political parties.
It's also a flawed argument to use the 2017 general election result as supporting Brexit in itself. The political context has changed and the issue of Brexit shouldn't be politicised along party lines, because both major parties have significant amounts of Remain and Leave voters. It's unlikely a party would win a parliamentary majority if it alienated one half of the electorate.
You certainly cannot argue there is a mandate for a no-deal Brexit.
So who do you think would take a step like that who actually holds enough power to do so?
It would be political suicide.
And to add to that there is a good chance they wouldn't even get the result they wanted.
There are several political landmines for both major parties. For the Conservatives, dissatisfaction with May's deal is helping a UKIP resurgence (polling about 6% from 1.5% last election), Tories who voted Remain will be tempted by the Lib Dems and finally, if Brexit puts the economy into recession, that'll probably destroy the Conservative's economic credibility even more than 2008 damaged Labour's economic credibility. As for Labour, prematurely supporting a second referendum will alienate Labour's supporters who voted Leave in working-class strongholds. If Labour backs May's deal, their support will alienate its cosmopolitan supporters to the point of desertion to the Lib Dems and its members strongly support a second referendum. Also, any second referendum bill will need cross-party support, and there is a good chance a % of Tory MPs who'd vote against the Government to prevent a no-deal Brexit.
To say Brexit is a political landmine is an understatement, to say the least. That is why both Conservative and Labour are navigating the climate very, very carefully because this has the potential to ruin a major political party for a generation.