Theresa May

PM forced to postpone exit date, despite half her party voting against.
0:0035:02HuffPost UK's Arj Singh and Paul Waugh is this week joined by Anand Menon, Henry Newman and Labour MP Stephen Kinnock as an unprecedented week at Westminster thunders on. Theresa May's deal has been defeated...again. But now what? Parliament yesterday struck down 'no deal' - though the vote wasn't legally binding and now a series of votes over the week could bring us closer to what Parliament actually wants Brexit to look like. But does anyone know what shape it could take?
Backbencher claims "betrayed" eurosceptics could support Labour bid to oust the PM.
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.
Night of high drama in Commons leaves PM on the brink.
Plus how your MP voted in the key no deal division on Wednesday night.
There will now be an attempt to woo the DUP to pre-empt rival plans for a 'people's vote' or a softer Brexit.