I was kind of hoping that her whole plan is a clever way to stop Brexit altogether i.e. get to the point where the only two options are No Deal and No Brexit and then "reluctantly" choose the latter for the sake of the country.
Can she withdraw Article 50 without a vote?
To be honest, she is at that point (No Deal or No Brexit) because the only other option was the deal parliament rejected. She says that revoking article 50 would overturn the referendum result and believes that would be wrong. So she will now only go to the No Deal option, unless Parliament can force her to revoke Article 50.
When the EU says "this is the only deal" does that mean they won't consider a Norway model this side of March 29? Looks like it. Maybe Corbyn is hoping for a postponement and renegotiation without the conservatives' red lines... but I've just read that his plan involves retaining the benefits of the single market but also ending freedom of movement. But would the EU agree to that? Labour's plan seems to be DOA too- apparently it has been rejected as 'cakeism'.
The PM replied to J Corbyn today:
"I note that you have said that 'ruling out' no deal is a precondition before we can meet, but that is an impossible condition because it is not within the Government's power to rule out no deal.
"Let me explain why. Under Article 50 of the Treaty on European Union and the Withdrawal Act 2018, we will leave the EU without a deal on 29 March unless Parliament either agrees a deal with the EU or the UK revokes article 50 and chooses to stay in the EU permanently.
"So there are two way to avoid no deal: either vote for a deal, in particular a Withdrawal Agreement, that has been agreed with the EU, or to revoke Article 50 and overturn the referendum result.
"I believe it would be wrong to overturn the referendum result."
So as I see it, the only way for May to "rule out No Deal" is to revoke Article 50. But Corbyn doesn't get that because he thinks we can negotiate a better deal.