I thought the 'overwhelming support' line was being trotted out in relation to the election where over 85%voted for parties with Brexit in their manifestoes?
Completely irrelevant.
You could just as easily claim that in 2015 approximately 87% of the electorate voted for parties that had staying in the EU in their manifesto, indicating 'overwhelming support' for the EU and therefore no need for a referendum.
You cannot make those crude assumptions from a general election where voters vote on a whole variety of issues.
A couple of interesting things from today's yougov poll.
Firstly they continue to ask their question about whether the UK was right or wrong to vote to leave the EU (they've been asking this regularly for the past year) - still no major change - I think there was a 2% majority for 'wrong' but effectively the country remains completely split down the middle on this question.
Secondly that we are seeing a consistent shift toward favouring soft brexit and remaining in the single market, even if that means no restrictions on freedom of movement.
So from the poll, the results were:
'It is more important for Britain to have control over EU
immigration into Britain than to keep free trade': 42%.
'It is more important to ensure Britain can trade freely with
the EU without tariff barriers than it is to control EU
immigration': 58%.
This aligns pretty well with Survation who found the following:
'A "hard" Brexit, involving leaving the EU single market and customs union': 35%
'A "soft" Brexit, not involving leaving the EU single market and customs union': 55%
And before people have a go at polling organisations claiming they got it wrong at the general election - Survation and YouGov were far and away the most accurate, with the YouGov model being almost spot on.