Theresa May has held meetings with leading Tory Remainers, amid speculation about further defections.

Justine Greening and Phillip Lee say Mrs May has ignored requests from pro-EU Tory MPs in favour of Brexiteers.

The pair had separate meetings with the PM in Downing Street.

Meanwhile, one ex-Labour member of the new Independent Group of MPs has said it could help keep Mrs May in power on condition that she agreed to another EU referendum with Remain as an option.

However, the PM was focused on her own party on Thursday, as she met cabinet ministers David Gauke and Greg Clark.

The pair have warned of the dangers to business of leaving the EU without a formal deal, an option which Brexiteers in the European Research Group of Conservative MPs insist must be preserved as negotiating leverage in Brussels.

The government said on Thursday that talks would continue "urgently" at a technical level, following "productive" meetings involving Brexit Secretary Stephen Barclay, Attorney General Geoffrey Cox and the EU's chief negotiator Michel Barnier.

In the UK, ex-Labour MP Gavin Shuker told The Huffington Post members of the new Independent Group had first made the offer of a potential confidence and supply agreement - like the one the DUP has with the government - last month in a meeting with the PM's second-in-command David Lidington.

Then-Labour MPs Chris Leslie, Luciana Berger and Chuka Umunna, along with then-Tory Anna Soubry, who have all joined the group this week, were also at the meeting.

Mr Shuker said he had told Mr Lidington he would support any type of deal provided there was a "confirmatory referendum" to get public backing but that the offer was rejected.

Image copyright PA Image caption Phillip Lee met Theresa May for talks in Downing Street

The leaders of both main parties are battling to prevent more defections after eight Labour MPs and three Tories broke away to form a new "centrist" group in Parliament.

Theresa May has written to the three Tory defectors - Anna Soubry, Heidi Allen and Sarah Wollaston - to reject what she describes as the "picture they paint of the party", saying its record on the NHS, employment and diversity proved it was "moderate" and "open-hearted".

The prime minister offered to "continue to work together on issues" where they agree - but told the three she rejected "the parallel you draw with the way Jeremy Corbyn and the hard left have warped a once-proud Labour Party".

In response to their claim that local Tory associations are being taken over by former UKIP members, Mrs May said: "An open, broad party should always welcome new members and supporters with a range of views, including those who have previously supported other parties."

But she said local party branches had been warned to ensure new members support the party's "values and objectives".

Ex-Tory MP Heidi Allen, one of the three defectors from the party, told ITV's Peston programme "a third" of Conservative MPs were fed up with the party's direction.

Ms Greening and Mr Lee, who quit as a justice minister over Brexit, have been named by Ms Allen as potential future defectors to the Independent Group.

The Right to Vote group, which is chaired by Mr Lee, said he had discussed the campaign's calls for a pause in the Brexit process and a possible second referendum with Mrs May.

"Talks were open and we are encouraged she listened to our case," the group said.

Media playback is unsupported on your device Media caption "I don't think I would be able to stay part of a party that was simply a Brexit party that had crashed us out of the EU"

Mr Lee has said one of the reasons the Tory MPs decided to quit the party was the access the Brexiteer European Research Group got to the prime minister, who he said had refused to meet his wing of the party.

Justine Greening - a former education secretary - told the Today programme she had been tempted to break away from the Conservative Party and join the Independent Group.

"It is something that I have considered, but I have reached a different conclusion for the moment," Ms Greening told Today.

"I don't think I would be able to stay part of a party that was simply a Brexit party that had crashed us out of the European Union."

The Independent Group was set up by eight defecting Labour MPs unhappy with their party's handling of Brexit and anti-Semitism.

They were later joined by three pro-Remain Tories - who accuse the Conservative leadership of allowing right-wing hardliners to shape the party's approach to Brexit and other matters.

Labour's Ian Austin also expressed sympathy with the Independent Group's aims, saying he would think "long and hard" about his future in the Labour Party.

Shadow home Secretary Diane Abbott told BBC Radio 4's The World at One: "I am very sad that the Labour members of this new independent organisation have gone.

"Up until the last minute, people were talking to them, trying to persuade them not to take the step they have taken."

She said she hoped they would continue to work with Labour on issues like homelessness, the benefit system, the NHS and "most of all fighting this Tory Brexit".

Meanwhile, Labour have contacted the Information Commissioner over alleged attempts to access personal data held by the party.

It is understood there are concerns an MP accessed party systems to contact members after reports of their resignation on Tuesday night.

Enfield North MP Joan Ryan, who announced she was quitting Labour in an interview with the Times published on Tuesday evening, said: "Neither I nor my office have accessed or used any Labour Party data since I resigned the Labour Whip and my membership of the Labour Party."