20:17

What we know

David Cameron has claimed victory and pledged to campaign with “all my heart and soul” to keep Britain inside the EU after a deal was struck on Friday evening to redraw the terms of the UK’s membership.

Leaders of the other 27 member nations agreed to a deal that will see:

a seven-year term for the emergency brake to restrict EU migrants in the UK claiming in-work benefits.

child benefit payments indexed to the cost of living for children living outside the UK for all new arrivals to the UK, extending to all workers from 1 January 2020.

any single non-eurozone country able to force a debate among EU leaders about ‘problem’ eurozone laws – though they will not have a veto.

an unequivocal opt-out stating that EU treaty “references to ever-closer union do not apply to the United Kingdom”.

What we don’t yet know

The date of the in/out referendum, widely believed, but not confirmed, to be 23 June.

Whether Michael Gove will make the leap from eurosceptic to full-blown no campaigner.



David Cameron preparing for Michael Gove to support Brexit Read more

What happens next

Cameron has summoned his cabinet to a meeting on Saturday morning – reportedly the first time the cabinet has met on a Saturday since the Falklands war. The prime minister will announce that the government endorses the deal and will campaign for the UK to stay in the EU – but this lets off the leash those members of the cabinet who oppose membership and will now be free to campaign for a no vote.

Innies, outies, unclears: where ministers stand on EU referendum Read more

What to read next

I’m wrapping up this live blog now, but we’ll be back with live coverage as Cameron convenes his cabinet on Saturday morning. Thanks for reading and for all your comments.