UK PM under fire over new Brexit plan
Theresa May will make the case for her new Brexit plan in Parliament later, amid signs that Conservative opposition to her leadership is hardening.
The prime minister will outline changes to the Withdrawal Agreement Bill - including a promise to give MPs a vote on holding another referendum.
But shadow Brexit secretary Sir Keir Starmer said the offer was "too weak".
Some senior Tories will today ask party bosses for a rule change to allow a no-confidence vote in her leadership.
Environment Secretary Michael Gove defended the PM's plan, urging MPs to "take a little bit of time and step back" to "reflect" on the detail of the bill - due to be published later today.
Fellow cabinet minister and prominent Brexiteer Andrea Leadsom said she was "looking very carefully at the legislation" and "making sure that it delivers Brexit".
MPs have rejected the withdrawal agreement negotiated with the EU three times, and attempts to find a formal compromise with Labour have failed.
On Tuesday, the prime minister asked MPs to take "one last chance" to deliver a negotiated exit - or risk Brexit not happening at all.
But several Tory MPs have criticised her plan. Among them, Nigel Evans will today urge party bosses on the 1922 committee to change party rules to allow for an immediate vote of no-confidence in Mrs May.
Because the PM survived such a vote in December, the current rules say she cannot face another for 12 months.
The committee has said 'no' to such a change before.
But the Conservative Home website has urged people not to vote for the party in Thursday's European elections if Mrs May is still in post "by the end of today".
Labour MPs have also spoken out against the PM's plan, with Sir Keir saying all she had offered was votes on customs arrangements and a further referendum that MPs would be able to get anyway as amendments to the bill.
He told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: "This is not a compromise of policy, it is just saying you can have votes on these things.
"In reality, the prime minister ought to now admit defeat. I think she would do well to just pull the vote and pause, as this is just going to nowhere."
Leader of the Liberal Democrats, Sir Vince Cable, echoed the point, telling Today: "If [Mrs May] said 'we will put forward the Withdrawal Bill subject to a confirmatory referendum'… we would be obliged to support it on that basis, but she is barely saying Parliament can have a vote if it wants to have a referendum.
"[That] is not in her gift, Parliament will do that anyway. What appears to be a concession isn't."
The BBC's political editor Laura Kuenssberg said if the government tries to delay bringing the bill forward - expected in the week of 3 June - it is "extremely hard to see" how the prime minister stays in post after the Bank Holiday weekend.
Other senior Tories have suggested Mrs May drops her Withdrawal Agreement Bill to avoid defeat and humiliation.
Conservative MP Boris Johnson - who wants to succeed Mrs May as prime minister - said on Twitter: "We are being asked to vote for a customs union and a second referendum. The Bill is directly against our manifesto - and I will not vote for it.
"We can and must do better - and deliver what the people voted for."
Meanwhile Dominic Raab, another leadership hopeful, said Mrs May's deal would "break our clear manifesto promises".
Tory MP Priti Patel accused the "entire cabinet and especially the so-called Brexiteers in office" of being "responsible for the betrayal" of Leave voters.
She tweeted: "They have undermined our democratic freedoms [and] broken public trust in our politics [and] democratic institutions."
Mrs May is bringing the Withdrawal Agreement Bill - legislation required to bring her agreement into UK law - to Parliament in early June.
In an attempt to win over MPs across the House, she announced the following concessions:
A guarantee of a Commons vote on whether to hold another referendum on the government's Brexit deal
A vote on different customs options, including a government proposal for a temporary customs union for goods - what Mrs May called a "customs compromise"
A legal obligation for the UK to "seek to conclude alternative arrangements" to replace the Northern Ireland backstop by the end of 2020
If the backstop does come into force, the bill would guarantee Northern Ireland remains aligned with the rest of the UK and remains in same customs territory
Legislation to ensure workers rights are "every bit as good, if not better" after Brexit - and guarantees of no dilution in environmental standards
A legal duty to seek changes to the political declaration on future relations with the EU
In a letter to Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, released on Wednesday, Mrs May said: "I have shown today that I am willing to compromise to deliver Brexit for the British people...
"I ask you to compromise too so that we can deliver what both our parties promised in our manifestos and restore faith in our politics."
But Labour has said it is not willing to back the bill at second reading, meaning it could fail at its first parliamentary hurdle.
And some Conservative MPs who backed Theresa May the last time she tried to get her withdrawal agreement through Parliament in March said they could no longer support her.
Meanwhile, Sammy Wilson, the Brexit spokesman for the DUP - whose support the government relies on to get its laws passed - said his party would "not accept this flawed agreement" that they believe would split Northern Ireland from the rest of the UK.
He told Today: "We have been through all of this before with the prime minister in the negotiations to date. It has been accepted by the government that [there] are flaws they cannot give an answer to.
"We will not vote for our own destruction."