Pro-Leave ministers are said to have warned Theresa May, pictured leaving Downing Street yesterday, not to water-down the Brexit deal or she'll risk 'splitting' the Tories
Theresa May has been dealt an ultimatum by her divided cabinet as she attempts to find a new Brexit plan - with pro-Leave ministers warning her not to water-down the deal.
The Prime Minister has been told by Brexiteers she 'risks splitting the Conservative party' if she compromises and tries to gain Labour's support for her plan.
Mrs May has also faced questions from pro-EU ministers who want to vote on legislation that would mean Brexit isn't possible on March 29 without a deal.
Labour's conditions of support include pursuing a permanent customs union with the EU and removing the threat of leaving without a deal - which some Tory MPs would not be happy with, reports the Financial Times.
A cabinet official said: 'A customs union would divide the party and is a total no-go.'
The ultimatum comes after a meeting at Downing Street on Friday where International Trade Secretary Liam Fox, the Leader of the House Andrea Leadsom, and Home Secretary Sajid Javid are thought to have been present.
Mrs May held a series of meetings with members of her cabinet yesterday, however she she did not intend to speak to any opposition, reports the Guardian.
Aid Secretary Penny Mordaunt - a Brexiteer - went public in defence of crashing out of the EU on Twitter- arguing it is better than accepting a bad deal.
Brexiteer Aid Secretary Penny Mordaunt, pictured leaving Number 10 yesterday, went public in defence of crashing out of the EU on Twitter, arguing it is better than accepting a bad deal
Ms Mordaunt insisted yesterday the EU had to believe a no deal Brexit was still an option to win new concessions from Brussels and make the deal acceptable to Tory rebels
Ms Mordaunt insisted today the EU had to believe a no deal Brexit was still an option to win new concessions from Brussels and make the deal acceptable to Tory rebels.
Before the meetings, Ms Mordaunt replied to a tweet by Times columnist Hugo Rifkind questioning support for no-deal among Thursday's Question Time audience.
Brexiteer Ms Mordaunt said: 'They might have judged that the upsides of leaving outweigh the downsides of staying/No Deal disruption, it's only when #nodealisbetter than a bad deal is believed by the EU that we'll maximise our chance of a deal (and) not honouring the result of the referendum would be appalling.'
Mrs May faced rejection in the commons earlier this week when she was defeated by 230 votes - the biggest for a government in history, outstripping Labour in 1924.
However she defeated Jeremy Corbyn's no-confidence motion by 325 votes to 306 after the DUP and Tory Brexiteers came back into the fold despite dealing her a humiliation on her EU deal the night before.
EU officials have said they will not reopen talks on the deal until the government has worked out what could be approved in commons.
This has sparked meetings within her divided cabinet to try and work out a way to get an agreement made.
Andrea Leadsom, left on Tuesday, and Sajid Javid, right with Jeremy Hunt on Tuesday, are said to have spoken with Theresa May yesterday after the ultimatum was given to her
A former cabinet minister told the Financial Times that if Mrs May made an agreement with Labour on a customs union, about 40 Eurosceptics would be ready to vote down non-EU legislation so government 'effectively grinds to a halt.'
Jeremy Corbyn has also reaffirmed his refusal to meet Mrs May for talks to discuss the way forward unless she takes the possibility of a no-deal Brexit off the table.
The Labour leader said the talks were 'not genuine' after No 10 made clear she would not accept a customs union with the EU.
He said this measure was 'necessary' for any new proposal to command the support of Parliament.
In a letter to the Prime Minister on Friday evening, Mr Corbyn, the only Westminster leader not to meet her, also complained she had ruled out any extension to the Article 50 withdrawal process or a second referendum.
'Whatever one thinks of those issues, that reinforces the view these are not genuine talks, but designed to play for time and give the appearance of reaching out, whilst sticking rigidly to your own emphatically rejected deal,' he wrote.
His intervention came as it was reported that pro-Brexit Cabinet ministers had warned her she risked splitting the Conservative Party if she gave way to calls for a customs union.
Ms Leadsom told the Daily Telegraph that no deal was the default position should no agreement be reached, adding: 'If we fail to prepare, we prepare to fail our country.'
Pro-Brexit Cabinet ministers warned Mrs May against giving way to calls for a customs union. Pictured is Secretary of State for International Trade Liam Fox at Number 10 on Tuesday
She told the paper: 'No deal is not the desired outcome, but it would be incompetent for any responsible government to rule it out, and there are very good reasons for that.
'If we rule out no deal, we can forget about the EU taking us seriously. We weaken our negotiating hand.'
While the Daily Mail reported that Jacob Rees-Mogg, chairman of the Leave-inclined European Research Group said no deal was better than Mrs May's deal, but Mrs May's deal was better than not leaving at all.
The Prime Minister is spending the weekend at her official country retreat at Chequers working on a statement to MPs on Monday setting out her approach following the overwhelming rejection of her Brexit deal by MPs.
Shadow Brexit secretary Sir Keir Starmer is set to say there are 'no easy routes' out of the current crisis.
In a speech to the Fabian Society new year conference in London on Saturday, he will say it is now up to Parliament to take the 'difficult decisions' needed to end the impasse.
In his speech, Sir Keir will lay the blame for her dilemma squarely at Mrs May's door, accusing her of having offered the country 'false hope and false promises'.
Shadow Brexit secretary Sir Keir Starmer, pictured, will say in a speech today that it is up to Parliament to take the 'difficult decisions' needed to end the impasse on Brexit
'It's now time for an open and frank debate about how we break the deadlock,' he will say.
'There are no easy routes out of the mess this Government has got us into on Brexit.
'Difficult decisions are going to have to be made by Parliament.
'Now is the time for an honest debate and for credible solutions to emerge.'
Earlier Tory MP Nick Boles warned ministers were ready to resign if the Government tried to block moves to give MPs the power to block a no-deal Brexit.
In an interview with the BBC Radio 4 Political Thinking podcast, the former minister said their was a growing bandwagon behind plan which could enable parliamentarians to demand Article 50 is extended to allow fresh talks with Brussels.
'We have had indications that many ministers, including Cabinet ministers are very, very keen to see it pass and are telling the Prime Minister that they will not vote against it,' he said.
'There is a bandwagon rolling, it's got a lot of momentum behind it and I very much hope that any MP who shares my view that a no-deal Brexit would be a disaster, will jump on board.'
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News Photo Pro-Leave ministers warn May not to water-down Brexit or she risks splitting Tory party
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