Brexit news: Labour-Tory talks set to implode as Theresa May condemned by opposition, amid MPs' anger over delay
Labour attacks prime minister for refusal to offer 'compromise or change'
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Your support makes all the difference.Theresa May has written to the EU requesting a Brexit extension until 30 June, as top-level talks between Jeremy Corbyn and the prime minister's negotiating teams appear on the brink of collapse.
It comes amid suggestions the bloc will offer the UK a year-long "flexible" delay at next week's emergency summit in Brussels next week.
A plan being drawn up by Donald Tusk, the president of the European Council, would allow the UK to leave earlier if parliament approves an exit deal.
Here's how we covered the day's development as they happened
Nigel Farage, the former Ukip leader, says the "world is looking on astonished at what is happening to our nation", and fears there are "more battles to fight" before Brexit is achieved.
Speaking to Sky News, he says "Brexit is about independence", which is being "actively and wilfully betrayed by virtually everyone in Westminster".
On the "confirmatory" referendum, he says it would offer a choice between Remain, and Ms May's deal. "It would be a disgrace if talks continued on that basis," he said.
Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt has said it was "not optimal" to have any delay to Brexit as he warned there would be "no choice" but to accept a long extension if a way through cannot be found.
He told the BBC: "It's obviously not optimal to have any extension at all and we have a plan to leave the EU and deliver on the referendum result which we put before Parliament a number of times.
"We still hope to leave the EU in the next couple of months, that's our ambition, we don't have a majority in Parliament and that means that we have to have these discussions with Jeremy Corbyn to see if there is enough common ground to do that."
Asked if he could accept a long extension, Mr Hunt said: "If we can't find a way through with Parliament then we have no choice."
Visiting Newport today to congratulate by-election winner Ruth Jones, Jeremy Corbyn said Labour had managed to "unite people, whether they voted Leave or Remain, against a government that is impoverishing so many people".
"That's what Labour was founded to achieve, that's what Welsh Labour showed yesterday, that's what the support we received showed," he said.
"People united together in the determination of the social, economic and political agenda that the Labour Party is putting forward."
You can read more on the by-election here
Brexiteer Mark Francois and ERG member says on the BBC that Theresa May's letter to Brussels is a "mistake" and says the UK should leave the European Union, without a deal.
"She [Ms May] has completely ignored her own cabinet which is unconstitutional and she's gone and done it anyway. Her deal will never pass the House of Commons, it's been voted down three times - the speaker may not even allow it to come back.
"I'm afraid the PM is in a sort of bunker here and is not listening to her own MPs, her own party members, or indeed her own cabinet and that is dangerous for the future of the country."
He adds: "We've been telling the country for two years that Jeremy Corbyn is a threat to national security, he's a threat to the economy, and now the prime minister openly sits down and talks to him about our national destiny.
"Lots of Tory MPs have written letters already to Sir Graham Brady, and many more are going in over the weekend asking for an unofficial indicative ballot of confidence in the prime minister. Let's see how many letters have gone in by Monday because the prime minister - utterly against the grain of her own party - and I suspect her own party won't let her get away with it."
Here's the latest development on the talks between Theresa May and Jeremy Corbyn's negotiating teams
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