> Just to be clear, article 50 hasn't been revoked, the UK will still leave the EU with no deal on March 30th.
I don't feel you clarified anything.
Do you mean if article 50 isn't revoked that the UK will leave the EU (true if nothing else happens) or that there are no circumstances under which the UK can remain in the EU?
The House of Commons need to vote to rescind Article 50 before March 30th otherwise the UK will automatically leave the EU with no deal.
There's currently no legislation, implied legislation, promises, or assurances from either the government or opposition to do so.
Essentially until Article 50 is withdrawn, the UK continues to march forward towards hard Brexit.
A successful vote today on Theresa May's deal would have assured a hard Brexit. The vote failing however hasn't resulted in "remain," it has simply placed the UK into an unknown state with automatic hard Brexit still lurking on the horizon.
Revoking article 50 means canceling brexit. They can still do it, but no major party currently supports it.
If they don't revoke it, they have to leave on March 30th. This can happen through some kind of deal with EU (a potential one was negotiated but shot down by todays vote) or without any deal.
I don't feel you clarified anything.
Do you mean if article 50 isn't revoked that the UK will leave the EU (true if nothing else happens) or that there are no circumstances under which the UK can remain in the EU?