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Troubled Theresa May is offering to look at ideas from other parties in a bid to get her reforms through Parliament.

The weakened Prime Minister will use a speech on Tuesday to invite Labour and the Lib Dems to come forward with “views and ideas”.

In a marked new tone, she will accept her failure to win a majority means “the reality I now face as Prime Minister is rather different.”

Saying she wants to find a better way forward, she will add: “It will be even more important to make the case for our policies and values.

“So I say to other parties, come forward with your views and ideas about how we can tackle these challenges as a country.

"We may not agree on everything, but through discussion ideas can be clarified and improved.”

(Image: Getty Images Europe)

Mrs May, scorned for her negative campaigning, will urge rivals to “contribute, not just criticise”.

Brexit Secretary David Davis has already held out an olive branch to Labour’s Sir Keir Starmer, who will join the privy council so he can be briefed on EU talks.

But Labour's shadow communities secretary Andrew Gwynne said the speech showed the government "has completely run out of ideas".

He added: "They're having to beg for policy proposals from Labour. They're also brazenly borrowing Labour's campaign slogans. But no one will be fooled - the Tories are the party of the privileged few.

"This is further evidence that this Government can no longer run the country."

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(Image: Sky News)

Mrs May marks her first year as PM on Thursday – with growing speculation about how long she can survive.

Tomorrow, MPs from all major parties will launch a group to block a hard Brexit .

Co-chaired by Tory Anna Soubry and Labour’s Chuka Umunna, it includes Lib Dem Jo Swinson and Stephen Gethins of the SNP .

Mr Umunna said: “We won’t accept MPs being treated as spectators in the Brexit process.”

Labour and the Lib Dems also hope to block parts of the EU Repeal Bill, which lets ministers rewrite hun­­dreds of laws without asking MPs.

Lib Dem MP Tom Brake said: “This government cannot be trusted with more power than Henry VIII had. I wouldn’t trust them to run a bath.”