The 1922 Committee Executive has already pointed her towards the exit door. It should now take her gently by the arm, and steer her through it as soon as possible.
The timetable for her departure as Conservative leader will be “agreed” after the Second Reading of the Withdrawal Agreement Bill.
We have four hundred or so more responses than last month – and almost exactly the same result.
I see the former WTO director and Delors chef de Cabinet return to the unresolved debate about high or low alignment.
But there was also a sense, outside the meeting of the 1922 Committee, that the revolution has only been postponed.
The EU asks: what do you want? But the Commons has said what it wants. Namely, the so-called Brady Amendment.
Not only are Leavers and Remainers drifting further apart, but the various Remain factions are now engaged in a furious blame game.
She yesterday achieved the outcome most likely to prop her up – at least for the time being. But Cooper, Letwin and Bercow are waiting in the wings.
All that passing May’s deal would do is lose the DUP, split the Party, boost Farage, and usher in an election. And the deal is bad in any event.