Like Merkel foundering over her immigration policies, May is foundering over Brexit, which was largely a referendum on EU immigration policies—that is, the British people voted to leave the EU so that they wouldn’t have to continue accepting the invasion of third-world migrants.  May is looking for a soft Brexit—against the people’s will—which would leave Britain in a weaker position.  May’s days seem numbered now that David Davis has resigned:

In a resignation announced just before midnight, Mr Davis told the PM that her policies would leave the UK in a ‘weak and inescapable’ negotiating position with just eight months until Britain cuts ties with Brussels.

He said that her ‘current policy and tactics’ make it ‘less and less likely’ that the UK will leave the customs union and single market – Mrs May responded by saying: ‘I do not agree with your characterisation of the policy we agreed at Cabinet on Friday.’

Mr Davis is said to have become convinced he was ‘selling out his own country’ by staying in post. He was praised by Tory MPs including Jacob Rees-Mogg and Andrew Bridgen, who have pledged to sink the PM’s proposals when they face a Commons vote.