Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn | Ian Forsyth/Getty Images Corbyn: UK could be better off outside EU with the right deal Labour Party members will meet Sunday night to agree one or more Brexit motions to be put to the party conference.

The U.K. could still find an exit deal that's better than remaining a member of the European Union, Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn said Sunday.

Asked whether the U.K. would be better off inside or outside the EU, the opposition leader told the BBC's Andrew Marr it “depends on the agreement you have with the European Union outside.”

Although Corbyn has said he will follow the policy decided by the party membership on its Brexit position — which could take the form of an unequivocal Remain stance — he has wavered on a commitment to back staying a member of the EU, unlike other senior Labour shadow ministers.

A meeting will be held Sunday night to agree one or more motions on Brexit to be put to the party conference. Members want Labour to adopt a pro-Remain position in any referendum, but the ruling National Executive Committee wants to wait until after a general election to decide whether it would back a deal Corbyn negotiates with Brussels. The options hammered out at the meeting will be voted on in the main conference hall on Monday.

"Please remember why people voted leave, why people voted remain, but also remember there is more that unites all of those people — over austerity, over investment, over education, over housing, over health, over a green industrial revolution — than there is that divides them," Corbyn said in the interview.

Corbyn, who is 70 years old, also said he would not step down midway through his term if he is elected prime minister.

POLITICO is hosting an exclusive happy hour event at the U.K. Labour Party Conference in Brighton on Monday September 23, featuring a live interview with Shadow Secretary of State for Exiting the European Union Keir Starmer. Details here.