British Prime Minister Theresa May kept her plan to trigger Brexit on track after promising MPs the chance to veto the final deal she strikes with the European Union.
May's Administration defeated an attempt in Parliament to force her to give MPs more power over the final Brexit agreement by 326 votes to 293 today, even though some senior members of her Conservative Party defied her authority and voted against the Government.
The rebel Conservatives - including former ministers - and opposition legislators wanted May to promise Parliament a binding vote on the terms of the UK's departure from the bloc before it is too late for the final agreement to be changed. They were demanding the option of sending May back to the negotiating table to seek better terms if the proposed UK-EU accord is not good enough.
But the PM's opponents were defeated in the House of Commons in London after Brexit Minister David Jones promised MPs a vote on the "final draft agreement". That accord will cover both the exit deal and the new trading relationship with the EU, before it is sent to the European Parliament for ratification, he said.
"It will be the choice between leaving the European Union with a negotiated deal, or not," Jones told the Commons. "To send the Government back to the negotiating table would be the surest way of undermining our negotiating position and delivering a worse deal."