David Davis - the minister at the forefront of negotiations with the EU - has resigned as Brexit secretary.

He said it looked "less and less likely" the party would deliver on the Brexit result and the Tory commitment to leave the customs union and single market.

"The general direction of policy will leave us in at best a weak negotiating position, and possibly an inescapable one," Mr Davis writes in his resignation letter.

It comes as Theresa May contends with a backlash against the new plans for Britain's future relationship with the European Union.

Pro-Brexit Tories are angry about the plan, with speculation it could end up in a leadership challenge.


:: Analysis - PM must fight for job after 'remarkable' resignation

Davis resignation 'an absolute bombshell'

At least one of Mr Davis's junior ministers, Steve Baker, is also thought to have resigned. Another deputy, Suella Braverman, was rumoured to have also quit but remains in post, the government has said. She refused to answer questions about her future when pressed by Sky News' Tom Rayner.

It is understood a replacement for Mr Davis was due to be announced some time after 9am.

The cabinet - including Mr Davis - all signed up to the proposals after a meeting at Chequers last week.

Far from resigning, seems @SuellaBraverman is standing by number 10, literally... pic.twitter.com/y7luiOgemc — Tom Rayner (@RaynerSkyNews) July 9, 2018

The plans to release a white paper on Thursday outlining the government's approach appears to be continuing on track, with the PM's chief of staff Gavin Barwell offering to meet with Labour MPs to brief them on the Chequers proposals later.

In his letter Mr Davis attacks the plans, saying they will make "the supposed control by Parliament illusory rather than real".

"I am also unpersuaded that our negotiating approach will not just lead to further demands for concession," he tells the prime minister.

He ends by saying that Mrs May needs "an enthusiastic believer in your approach, and not merely a reluctant conscript".

:: In full: David Davis resignation letter and Theresa May's response

:: Who could replace David Davis as Brexit secretary?

Here is David Davis resignation letter pic.twitter.com/Qzj2rLaw6z — Faisal Islam (@faisalislam) July 8, 2018

The PM is due to set out the Brexit plans in parliament later, before a potentially stormy meeting with her own MPs.

In her own letter, Mrs May thanks Mr Davis for his service, but tells him: "I do not agree with your characterisation of the policy we agreed at Cabinet on Friday."

Hitting back at his claims, the prime minister sets out 12 points "how we will deliver on the result of the referendum and the commitments we made in our manifesto".

They include "ending free movement", "a new business-friendly customs model", "no more sending vast sums of money each year to the EU", and "no hard border between Northern Ireland and Ireland".

The PM adds: "At Chequers on Friday, we as the Cabinet agreed a comprehensive and detailed proposal which provides a precise, responsible, and credible basis for progressing our negotiations towards a new relationship between the UK and the EU after we leave in March."

:: What exactly is May's new Brexit plan?

Sky's political correspondent Lewis Goodall called Mr Davis's resignation "an absolute bombshell".

"The big question now is, is David Davis going to be joined by any other figures? All eyes of course will be on Boris Johnson and other Brexiteers," he said.

Mr Davis told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that it was up to other former cabinet colleagues to decide if they want to but he did not want to see Mrs May forced out as PM.

He denied his shock move had weakened her position, saying, when as if she can survive: "Oh yes, of course."

Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson reportedly described defending the Brexit plans as like "polishing a turd" during the Chequers summit, before eventually falling into line behind the prime minister.

Jacob Rees Mogg tells me: “This is very important. It raises the most serious questions about the PM’s ideas. If the Brexit Secretary cannot support them they cannot be very good proposals. It was an attempt to bounce the cabinet. It was a seriously mistake.” — Lewis Goodall (@lewis_goodall) July 8, 2018

He adds, “It is not her finest night in politics.” — Lewis Goodall (@lewis_goodall) July 8, 2018

Leading Brexiteer Jacob Rees-Mogg told Sky's Lewis Goodall: "This is very important. It raises the most serious questions about the PM's ideas.

"If the Brexit Secretary cannot support them they cannot be very good proposals. It was an attempt to bounce the cabinet. It was a serious mistake."

He added: "It is not her [Theresa May's] finest night in politics."

A leadership contest would be triggered if 48 Conservative MPs formally submit letters, and some have already reportedly been sent to the Tories' backbench 1922 Committee.

The prime minister said on Friday that the proposals were "good for the UK and good for the EU" and would "deliver prosperity and security".

Deal will deliver 'prosperity for our people'

They include the creation of a UK-EU free-trade area, so that Britain would have the same rules for all goods as it currently does as a member of the European Union.

In her appearance in the Commons later, Mrs May will admit the cabinet have had "robust views" but will insist she has listened to "every possible idea" and that "this is the right Brexit".

She will tell MPs the proposals "will deliver on the democratic decision of the British people".

Environment Secretary Michael Gove - a key figure in the 2016 Leave campaign - said on Sunday that the plans were not everything he had hoped for, but that he was a "realist".

He called them a "perfect balance" between the need for close access to Europe and allowing the services industry to diverge from EU rules and regulations.

EU leaders have warned time is running out to get a Brexit deal sorted. The UK is due to leave on 29 March next year.