The British People's Vote campaign is expected to be a huge rally to demand a second referendum on the bricast under the slogan "Bring the people back" as Britain's exit crisis from the EU threatens to oust Prime Minister Teresa Mae.

The rally organizers say hundreds of thousands will participate, and the protesters will start near Hyde Park in central London and reach Parliament Square through Trafalgar Square.

Participants will raise banners saying that the solution to the crisis in the hands of the people after the failure of politicians, and after the crisis threatens their lives and their jobs and jobs.
The demonstrators demand the introduction of any agreement or plan to exit the European Union to the popular referendum so that the citizen has the final decision.

EU calls for exit from EU (Getty Images)

March .. controversy
Observers expected the number of demonstrators - demanding a second referendum on Britain's exit from the bloc - to rise to more than one million after a similar march in October, attended by some 700,000 people.

The list of participants in the march includes London Mayor Sadiq Khan of the opposition Labor Party and Scottish National Party leader Nicolas Stirgen.

After three years of intense debate, it remains unclear how and when the bloc will emerge from the original, with May trying to find a way out of the most difficult political crisis in the country in nearly 30 years.

May hinted yesterday that it may not re-propose an agreement reached to withdraw from the Union to parliament to vote for the third time next week if there is not enough support for approval, while the Times and Daily Telegraph reported that pressure is increasing on them to resign.

May has repeatedly said it will not accept a veto article 50 (Reuters)

Writings .. Signatures
Yesterday, the number of signatories to the petition demanding the government to withdraw from the process of exit more than three million people.

With the acceleration of those signatures - through the petition site of the government and the parliament - the site suddenly collapsed Thursday.

In a tweet on Twitter ahead of the collapse of the site, the parliamentary appeals committee said the rate of signatures was "the highest rate the site has ever seen."

The petition calls on the government to revoke Article 50 of the EU treaty governing the process of exit, which effectively means canceling the exit procedures voted for by most Britons in the 2016 referendum.

However, the prime minister's spokesman said May had repeatedly said she would not accept a veto of article 50, seeing such a move as a failure of democracy.

Britain is expected to step out of the bloc on March 29, but European leaders agreed on Thursday to submit two May options, one to May 22 if the British parliament approves the exit agreement and the other until April 12 if it refuses. Parliament Agreement.