Brexit: Parliament gets to decide between no deal and delay Prime Minister Theresa May has bowed to intense political pressure and handed control of Brexit to Parliament.

LONDON -- British Prime Minister Theresa May bowed to intense political pressure Tuesday and handed control of Brexit to Parliament, telling lawmakers they will get to choose between leaving the European Union on schedule — with or without a divorce deal — and asking the EU to postpone departure day.

May said that if Parliament rejects her deal with the EU in a vote due by March 12, lawmakers will vote the next day on whether to leave the bloc without an agreement. If that is defeated, as seems likely, they will vote on whether to ask the EU to delay Brexit by up to three months.

May said the promises were "commitments I am making as prime minister and I will stick by them."

Britain is due to leave the EU on March 29, but so far the government has not been able to win Parliament's backing for its divorce deal with the bloc. That leaves the U.K. facing a chaotic "no-deal" Brexit that could cause disruption for businesses and people in both Britain and the EU.

May shifted position after members of her own government joined calls for her to rule out a "no-deal" departure.

Three government ministers wrote in Tuesday's Daily Mail that they would vote with opposition lawmakers to stop a no-deal departure unless May agreed to delay Brexit and guarantee "we are not swept over the precipice on March 29."

May said her goal remains to lead Britain out of the EU on schedule and with a deal.

"I don't want to see an extension," she said, adding that any delay to Brexit should be "as short as possible."

Delaying Brexit would require approval from all 27 other EU countries. The bloc has said it is likely to agree, but only if Britain has a good reason for the pause.

Businesses warn that without a deal Britain risks a chaotic departure that could disrupt trade between the U.K. and the EU, its biggest trading partner. The uncertainty has already led many British firms to shift some operations abroad, stockpile goods or defer investment decisions.

Businesses and the markets breathed a sigh of relief at May's statement, which did not rule out "no deal" but at least pushed it a bit further away. The pound rose above $1.32, its highest level for a month.

"Today, we have seen real movement towards ruling out a chaotic and damaging no-deal on March 29," said Mike Cherry, national chairman of the Federation of Small Businesses.

But many lawmakers pointed out that British politics remains deadlocked over Brexit, with both May's governing Conservatives and the main opposition Labour Party deeply split on the issue.

Pro-EU Conservative legislator Ken Clarke said delaying Brexit would not break the logjam, but only see the "present pantomime" continue, with "similar chaos about where we are going."

The House of Commons rejected May's deal with the EU last month — largely over concerns about a provision to guarantee an open border between the U.K.'s Northern Ireland and EU member Ireland — and sent May back to Brussels to get changes.

The EU is adamant that the legally binding withdrawal agreement can't be changed, though the bloc's negotiators are holding talks with U.K. Attorney General Geoffrey Cox about potential tweaks or additions around the margins.

May's concession to Parliament came ahead of a series of votes Wednesday in which pro-EU lawmakers planned to try to force the government to rule out a "no-deal" Brexit.

Opposition Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn accused May of "continuing to run down the clock."

"Every delay, every bit of badly made fudge just intensifies the uncertainty for industry, business, investment being held back, jobs being lost and more jobs being putting at risk," he said.

Labour, which has its own internal schism over Brexit, took a step Monday toward campaigning for a new EU membership referendum as a way to break the deadlock. The left-of-center party said it would back a second public vote if the House of Commons rejects its alternative Brexit plan, which calls for Britain to retain close economic ties with the EU.

Corbyn said that if May's deal was approved by Parliament, "we believe there must be a confirmatory public vote to see if people feel that's what they voted for" in the 2016 EU membership referendum.

But the idea of a new referendum faces opposition from some Labour lawmakers in areas that voted to leave the bloc, who say reversing Brexit would betray the will of voters.

"We can't ignore millions of Labour 'leave' voters," said Labour lawmaker Caroline Flint.

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