House of Commons of the United Kingdom
Prime Minister Theresa May took a second blow in two days as the House of Commons voted to agree that the UK would not leave the EU without a withdrawal agreement in place. While the vote is not legally binding, it does take the threat of crashing out of the EU with no deal off the table for May. On Thursday, the next big vote will be on extending Article 50, as the 29 March deadline looms.
Minister admits claim deaths caused by soldiers during conflict were "not crimes" was "deeply insensitive".
After a day of debating in the House of Commons, MPs voted on a number of amendments to the Brexit bill. Although several were defeated, the amendment brought by Tory grandee Sir Graham Brady was passed. Prime Minister Theresa May will now have to travel back to Brussels and reopen the deal with the 27-nation bloc.
The Channel 4 presenter gave a speech at a Holocaust Memorial Day reception at the House of Commons.
After several days of intense talks with MPs, Theresa May addressed the House Of Commons on 21 January 2019 with the updated plan for Brexit.
Theresa May has had her Brexit deal rejected by a massive majority in the House of Commons, voting 432 to 202 to throw out her proposals. Jeremy Corbyn followed up by tabling a vote of no confidence in the government.
Exclusive: If she digs in, parliament would "instruct" her to change course, HuffPost UK has been told.
Tonight is likely to see the government receive a big thumbs down from the Lords – we must hope the Commons takes the same view
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