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MPs will be able to vote on Theresa May's Brexit 'plan B' on January 29, it has been confirmed.

It comes after the Commons emphatically voted down Mrs May's deal with the European Union on Tuesday evening.

Leader of the House Andrea Leadsom said the Prime Minister would put forward a motion and make a statement on her next steps on Monday.

"A full day's debate on the motion will take place on Tuesday, 29 January, subject to the agreement of the house," Ms Leadsom told Parliament.

After MPs have voted, there will be just 59 days before the UK is due to leave the EU.

The Prime Minister survived a no confidence vote brought by Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn on Wednesday before vowing to continue with Brexit negotiations.

In Downing Street last night she declared it is time for "finding a way forward" and invited MPs from all parties to try to achieve a breakthrough, saying it was time to "put self interest aside".

She will announce her 'plan B' after meeting with a variety of opposition parties in the coming days.

Mrs May has already held talks with Lib Dem leader Sir Vince Cable, SMP Westminster leader Ian Blackford and Plaid Cymru's Liz Saville-Roberts late on Wednesday in a bid to get a Parliamentary consensus.

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But Jeremy Corbyn said he would not even sit down with her until she agrees to kill off the threat of a no-deal Brexit.

In a speech in Hastings on Thursday, the Labour leader dismissed the Prime Minister's cross-party talks as a "stunt".

"Last night's offer of talks with party leaders turned out to be simply a stunt, not the serious attempt to engage with the new reality that is needed," he said.

He added: "I say to the Prime Minister again: I am quite happy to talk but the starting point for any talks about Brexit must be that the threat of a disastrous no-deal outcome is ruled out, taken off the table, and we can talk about the future of the plans that we will put forward and the future relationship with Europe."

In a direct message to Mrs May, Mr Corbyn said: "Take no-deal off the table now please Prime Minister."

He also repeated that all options remained on the table, including a second referendum, saying: "Given the severity of the crisis it would be wrong to rule any of them out".

It came as a snap poll conducted in the wake of the PM's crushing defeat on her Brexit plan found a 12-point lead for remaining in the EU, the largest margin since the referendum.

The YouGov survey of more than 1,000 voters found 56 per cent would now vote to stay in the EU, against 44 per cent who want to leave.

Exactly the same proportion of voters said they wanted a second EU referendum, three points higher than recorded in a similar poll before Christmas.