European press gets popcorn out for another chaotic day of Brexit
The Guardian
European press and commentators switched on the TV, pulled out the popcorn and sat back to watch the latest preposterous episode in Britains Brexit psychodrama with a mixture of disbelief and resignation.
Most series start getting dull after a second or third season, but Brexits different, said Germanys Die Zeit. The longer it lasts, the better the plot gets. Yesterdays twist was the best yet: first the unloved PM offers to go, then MPs seize the initiative and it seems the tide may be turning.
But wait
In the end, it turns out they can agree on absolutely nothing. So, cue uproar in the house, and the credits start running. Order, roars John Bercow. Please do not adjust your set: well be back right after the break.
After a day in which Theresa May offered to step down as prime minister if MPs backed her twice-rejected Brexit deal, and parliament failed dismally to agree on any one of eight possible ways forward, the papers incredulous front page headline was: All against all, and all against everything.