Prime Minister Theresa May finally unveiled the Conservative manifesto on Thursday after spending the week criticising the Labour Party’s, and it appears that May and the Conservatives are hell-bent on a hard-Brexit.

Theresa May’s Brexit position has been alarmingly equivocal over the last six months or so, as she has seemingly wrestled with both sides of the argument within her own party. Theresa May has previously insisted, "Brexit means Brexit".

But the Conservative's manifesto appears to be backing a hard-Brexit approach.

“We continue to believe that no deal is better than a bad deal for the UK,” writes the Tory manifesto. And the other quotes are as equally punishing for Remainers, and likely to rattle the cage of Remoaners.

“We will no longer be members of the single market or customs union,” was also inscribed within the Tory manifesto.

It appears that the main reason for the UK’s insistence of a hard-Brexit is due to May’s quest to reduce immigration. For free movement to end, the UK cannot have access to the single market.

Despite failing to hit her immigration target as Home secretary, she seems to be pleading with the electorate to give her another chance.

“It is our objective to reduce immigration to sustainable levels, by which we mean annual net migration in the tens of thousands.”

A hard-Brexit indicates a complete withdrawal from the European Union – leaving the customs union and the single market, the latter accounting for nearly 50% of the UK’s exports in 2015.

Despite numerous promises from the Prime Minister that there would be no snap general election, she spectacularly u-turned and called for the electorate to give her a bigger mandate, and the House of Commons backed the election by 522 to 13.

The Conservatives are expected to clinch an overwhelming majority in the general election on June 8, despite a recent surge in the polls toward Jeremy Corbyn’s Labour.

It was recently reported that a softer Brexit approach could be adopted, but the Tory manifesto has surely erased any such position.

There have been worrying Brexit warnings from several experts, including a European Commission Official, who has said that Brexit could lead to a complete breakdown between the UK and EU.