You're both right LB and Stagger, and for that reason there is a little wiggle room in what type of Brexit the government delivers and still says "this is what you voted for". And I realise this is grey area, and I'm likely to be to at one end of that grey area as a remainer, just as you are likely to be at the other end. For me, given that there are hundreds of quotes and youtube clips of prominent brexiteer politicians saying during the campaign that we will get a deal, I think that's what got them over the line. I suggest if they'd have said "we'll try to get a deal, but if we can't we'll leave without a deal" the result would have been different.

So to bring us back to where we are now. I see two outcomes:
1. Boris is trying to convince everyone that he favours a no-deal, but in reality this is a bargaining position so he can get a better deal. If he gets a deal, well done him. He can probably get re-elected on the back of this, depending on how much of a victory the electorate view this as. If this goes wrong, the Brexit party might split the Tory vote. Politics aside, I think this is the outcome on Brexit most people would favour. Stagger, LB, do you agree?
2. Boris is trying to get a no-deal to shoot the Brexit party's fox and to then blame the EU and hope to get elected on the back of that. As a remainer, I can see the benefits of this to Boris, but not for the country as a whole.

Of course, this very much depends what sort of deal. I'm guessing the deal would be something like the May-Barnier deal but with the NI situation sorted out - that seems to be what is being discussed now.