Where on earth do you get that from. The EU have offered the current deal - it is what they have signed up to and ratified.
In initial negotiations it was either Canada or Norway, Norway was taken off the table because of May's red lines.
Tusk said:-
"The EU cannot grant the rights of Norway, with the obligations of Canada"
https://euobserver.com/uk-referendum/141238 Not sure I understand your argument, but there are plenty of hard line brexiteers for whom EFTA/Norway is the worst of all possible outcomes - in their minds it isn't really leaving the EU but also means we have no say in the rules that still apply to us.
They do not have a veto on where end up, it is impossible to come out of this situation with everyone happy. Both extremes Hard Brexiteers and Remainiacs have to compromise.
You don't seem to even want to contemplate compromise.
Hypothetical non-sense - we've had scaremongering that the hard right will take over France (LePen), Germany, Netherlands, Austria etc etc for years - it never happens.
Did you forget to mention Hungary and Poland, or Italy where the far right are in a coalition and have a Deputy Prime Minister?
https://www.politico.eu/article/hungary-and-poland-say-no-to-lgbtiq/France is in flames, Merkel is in trouble, Italy on the brink of recession.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-44168602And even if it were to happen in some future period, a referendum would need to be held in the next 6 months or so (if after 29th March we'd need a limited extension to article 50, which the EU would be happy to give on the basis of allowing a referendum to take place). The referendum would need to include deliverable and/or agreed options - so at maximum May's deal, no deal, remain. Whichever way the public votes the option is deliverable - we sign the May deal, we revoke article 50 or we do neither of the above and leave without a deal.
So lets gets this straight you now want the options on the Losers Vote (Peoples Vote my arse), to be:-
1. Remain
2. No Deal
3. May's Deal
Simple the question should be EXACTLY the same as last one but with options in the event of No result, Norway or Canada / EFTA - Free Trade.
So we are voting on the transition deal? Why would we do that, surely the most democratic way would be to vote on the direction of travel, e.g. Norway or Canada. May's deal doesn't rule out either as I understand it. Not that I think another referendum is the way to go.
The EU can no more tweak the deal they have ratified than we can.
The deal isn't ratified.
And when will that be, pray tell. We cannot even apply to EFTA until we have left, and therefore we have to have a transitional agreement. Remember all we are discussing in parliament is the transitional (withdrawal agreement) - if this is ratified we will be onto discussion on the final landing point - the permanent arrangement. There is not a cat in hell's change that Farage, JRM, Boris etc etc are simply going to say, 'sure EFTA, fine with me' - we will start the whole debate once again on the final deal, and sorting that out will take years - I'd say perhaps 4 years with a decent following wind (Canada took 7 years).
Yes take May's deal then go for Norway, there will be debates over that, the majority in Parliament will dictate which direction we go in.
The biggest stumbling block on a trade deal is alignment, we are currently 100% aligned. Norway with a backstop can be done in no time at all if all parties agreed.
The sad truth is that if we leave we will not be able to move on from the endless debate about final situation until probably 2024 at the earliest.
And I don't mean the notion that whatever is decided there will be a very substantial minority who hate it.
I think you will find once we leave, Norway will become the majority view in Parliament and the country.
Imagine we have left, this debate runs to 100+ pages and I would guess biggest contributors have been us two.
We leave in March 2019, our debate is over since we both agree that next we should go for Norway.