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British Prime Minister Theresa May on Thursday suffered another defeat in parliament over her Brexit strategy, just 43 days before Britain is due to leave the European

Union. The House of Commons rejected a government motion intended to express MPs' support for May as she continues an 11th-hour bid to renegotiate her Brexit deal with the EU.

Hardline eurosceptics in her Conservative party abstained from voting on the government's non-binding motion, which they believed raised the chances of avoiding a no-deal Brexit.

Opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn said the defeat "shows there is no majority for the PM (prime minister)'s course of action in dealing with Brexit."

"She cannot keep on just running down the clock and hoping that something will turn up that will save her day and save her face," he said of May, who was not in parliament for the defeat.

A Downing Street spokesman blamed the setback on "a concern from some Conservative colleagues about taking 'no deal' off the table at this stage".

He added that the government would continue to seek changes to the withdrawal agreement May has struck with the EU but has so far failed to sell to MPs, "to ensure we leave on time on 29th March."

Leading Brexiteer Liam Fox had earlier warned colleagues that defeat would raise doubts about whether a renegotiated deal could get through parliament, making the bloc less likely to make an offer.

"Our European partners will be watching our debate and listening today to see if they get the impression that if they were to make those concessions parliament would definitely deliver," trade minister Fox told BBC Radio 4.

"There's a danger that we send the wrong signals."

- Talks at 'crucial stage' -

British MPs roundly rejected May's initial deal last month, but later parliamentary votes suggested a slim majority for her deal if she could get rid of the so-called "backstop" clause intended to keep the border with Ireland free-flowing.

Some fear the measure could leave Britain trapped in EU trade rules indefinitely with no withdrawal mechanism.

British officials have since held a series of meetings with EU counterparts, who have ruled out reopening negotiations.

"The talks are at a crucial stage. We now all need to hold our nerve to get the changes this house requires and deliver Brexit on time," May told lawmakers on Tuesday.

"Having secured an agreement with the EU for further talks, we now need some time to complete that process," she said. afp

The announcement was seen by political commentators as an attempt to stave off the threat of parliamentary rebellion, with MPs now having to wait until February 27 for another series of votes on what to do if no agreement is reached.

Business leaders and economists have warned of shockwaves around the continent if no transition deal is in place when Britain leaves the EU.

Shadow Brexit secretary Keir Starmer accused May of deliberately wasting time to ramp up pressure to pass her deal, and warned that MPs would not let her leave without a deal.

Ronan McCrea, professor of constitutional and European law at University College London, told AFP that Thursday's defeat made May's ongoing negotiations with Brussels "even more impossible".

"They will rightly say 'well, how do we know that any concessions we give won't be followed by further concessions, because we don't know that you can get anything through parliament'," he added.