Put It To The People March: People’s Vote campaign announces Brexit protest for second referendum It aims to convince the government to give the British public the final say on any Brexit deal it might try to agree in Parliament

The People’s Vote campaign will take to the streets the weekend before the UK is set to leave the EU in a last ditch attempt to secure a second referendum.

It aims to convince the Government to give the British public the final say on any Brexit deal it tries to agree in Parliament.

When will the march take place?

The march, named “put it to the people”, will take place on 23 March, days before the Brexit deadline of 29 March.

The i politics newsletter cut through the noise Email address is invalid Email address is invalid Thank you for subscribing! Sorry, there was a problem with your subscription.

The march is set to begin at 12pm on London’s Park Lane and finish in Parliament Square with a rally and keynote speeches.

The full details of the event are yet to be finalised but it is likely to run in a similar format to the original People’s Vote march in October 2018.

During that march, around 700,000 came out wielding banners and shouting slogans in central London.

How can I join the march?

If you want to join thousands of like-minded people – as well as several leading politicians including Caroline Lucas, David Lammy and more – sign up using the online web form here.

‘Nowhere to hide’

The move has been welcomed by pro-EU MPs across all parties.

Conservative Anna Soubry said there will be “nowhere for any MP to hide” during the final week of March.

“There is now a real danger that this is going to go right down to the wire. The Prime Minister appears intent on holding the long-awaited meaningful vote as late as possible, in the hope of pressuring MPs into backing what they know is a bad deal,” the former government minister said.

“And Jeremy Corbyn appears happy to let the clock run down, rather than tabling Labour’s proposals or backing a People’s Vote.

“But come the final week of March there will be nowhere for any MP to hide, which is why this march could be of historic significance. Parliament will need a way out, and the demand will be loud and clear: put short term party politics aside, put Britain’s national interest first. Put it to the people.”

Additional reporting by Press Association