18:04

This is how the parties divided in the vote on the motion approving the PM’s decision to seek an article 50 extension until 30 June.

For

Labour: 223

Conservatives: 131

SNP: 33

Independents: 17

Lib Dems: 11

Plaid Cymru: 4

Greens: 1

Total: 420

Against

Conservatives: 97

DUP: 9

Labour: 3 (Ronnie Campbell, Stephen Hepburn, Kate Hoey)

Independents: 1 (Frank Field)

Total: 110

And here are some key points that emerge from the figures.

May won the vote with majority opposition support. Only 31% of her votes - less than a third - came from Conservative MPs. On Brexit you could argue this is the moment when she became a Ramsay MacDonald; heading a national government, but reliant on the votes of another party.

The Tories split three ways, and fairly evenly, in this division. Some 42% of Tory MPs voted with the government, another 30% voted against, and the rest did not vote.

In a further sign that government discipline is breaking down, 12 ministers did not vote with the government, including Andrea Leadsom, the leader of the Commons, Chris Grayling, the transport secretary, and Liam Fox, the international trade secretary. It is not clear yet how many of these were deliberate abstentions (ie, in defiance of the whip), and how many were approved absences, but it would be unusual to have this many ministers having permission not to vote in a division like this.

Steven Swinford (@Steven_Swinford) 80 Tory MPs did not vote to delay Brexit until June 30 including 12 ministers:



Geoffrey Cox

Chris Grayling

Liam Fox

Andrea Leadsom

Brandon Lewis

Nadhim Zahawi

Kwasi Kwarteng

Kit Malthouse

Nus Ghani

Chris Pincher

Jesse Norman

Kelly Tolhurst

Jeremy Corbyn has kept his party united on this issue. Only three Labour MPs defied the whip to vote with the government.

That’s all from me for today.

My colleague Kevin Rawlinson is now taking over.