At least three government ministers privately support giving the public another vote on Brexit, a former minister has claimed.
Dr Phillip Lee, who quit the government in June in order to speak out on Brexit, said he knew of other ministers who were “on the cusp” of resigning over the issue.
The MP warned a fringe event at the Conservatives’ annual conference that the party was now “on the side of angry men, against women and young people”.
Asked how many Tory MPs privately support the campaign for a Final Say referendum, Mr Lee told the Conservatives for a People’s Vote event: “I suspect there are significant numbers of colleagues who see the argument for a second vote.
“I know of some others ministers who do, who I’ve had direct conversations with, but it is a difficult environment for them to come out.
“I think more are on the cusp, but it needs public support and business support and I think you’ll see more come out and support us.”
Mr Lee recalled a recent event in his Bracknell constituency where he said “an angry man” had voiced opposition to a second public vote, while “a much more controlled young mother with a buggy” had backed the public having a final say.
He said: “In that moment I thought: how has the Conservative Party got itself on the side of angry men and against women and young people?”
Speaking at the same event, former education secretary Justine Greening said another public vote was the only way to break “stalemate” in parliament.
She said: “The Chequers deal isn’t going to get through, I don’t think a Canada deal would get through and no-deal is absolutely going to be voted down by parliament. Those are just the facts.
“We are going to reach stalemate ... I think there is a growing band of Conservative MPs who have thought their way through this and reached the logical conclusion that a referendum is the only way we can unblock parliament’s stalemate.
“A growing number of Conservative MPs recognise this. It’s a question of when they make their views known, not if.”
Ms Greening warned Tory members the party would suffer at the ballot box unless it agrees to let the public decide the terms of Brexit.
She said: “The words ‘Tory Brexit’ will be ringing through the country forever and a day and there will be no pivoting for our party if this doesn’t work out.
“We shouldn’t have a strategy of guess and hope – guess that this is the right route forwards that people want, and then hope that it all works out.
“I don’t think we can do that on something this profound and this important. I don’t think it’s right and I don’t think its smart.”
The Independent has launched its #FinalSay campaign to demand that voters are given a voice on the final Brexit deal.
Sign our petition here