Brexiteers plotting to topple Theresa May faced a ferocious Tory backlash on Thursday night.
On a dramatic day at Westminster, hardline Eurosceptics went public with their bid to oust the Prime Minister, following the resignation of Dominic Raab, Esther McVey and two junior ministers over Brexit.
Jacob Rees-Mogg confronted Mrs May in the Commons before holding an extraordinary Press conference outside Parliament, saying he had submitted a letter of no confidence in her. Another 15 MPs also announced they had submitted letters in a bid to reach the threshold of 48 needed to trigger a confidence vote.
But angry moderate Tories rallied round the Prime Minister and warned the Eurosceptics that they could bring down the Government, damage the economy and jeopardise Brexit if they pressed ahead with a coup.
Mrs May pledged to stand and fight if her critics forced a vote of no confidence in her leadership, telling reporters: 'Am I going to see this through? Yes.'
However, there were fears she could face further resignations on Friday, with Michael Gove, Chris Grayling and Penny Mordaunt all considering whether to quit.
Mr Gove reportedly turned down Mrs May's invitation to become the new Brexit Secretary, after he insisted he would want to renegotiate the deal with Brussels himself.
The Prime Minister used a press conference in Downing Street (pictured) to double down on her determination to press ahead with her controversial pact with the EU
It came as:
- Mrs May defied critics who warn that her deal will be blocked by MPs, saying she would emulate her cricketing hero Geoffrey Boycott and 'get the runs in the end';
- The Prime Minister delayed a government reshuffle because of fears more ministers could quit today;
- Mr Gove turned down the job of Brexit Secretary after Mrs May refused his demand for the right to renegotiate with Brussels;
- Miss Mordaunt made a fresh appeal to Mrs May to give MPs a free vote on the deal in a bid to end the civil war;
- Boris Johnson, who attended a crunch meeting of European Research Group members, refused to say whether he had submitted a letter of no confidence;
- Scottish Secretary David Mundell condemned Mr Raab as a 'carpet-bagger', saying his resignation was 'more about manoeuvring and leadership' than principles;
- An exclusive poll for the Mail found that more than half of Tory voters oppose the attempted coup, with just 30 per cent wanting Mrs May to go;
- Jeremy Corbyn said Labour would vote against the proposals, even though this could lead to a chaotic exit without a deal;
- DUP deputy leader Nigel Dodds suggested his party would end the confidence and supply deal which props up Mrs May's Government unless she backs down over plans that would create 'a vassal state and break up the UK'.
Seven MPs quit ministerial roles yesterday as Mrs May faced sustained criticism of her Brexit agreement during a three-hour appearance at the Commons despatch box.
Mr Rees-Mogg, chairman of the European Research Group of Brexiteer MPs, led the backbench effort to unseat Mrs May.
He told the Prime Minister she was losing his support, saying her proposals 'did not deliver Brexit'. He denied he was mounting a 'coup', but said Mrs May should be replaced by a Brexiteer, with Mr Johnson and Mr Raab top of his list.
Others who said they had put in letters included Peter Bone, James Duddridge, Philip Davies, Andrea Jenkyns, Nadine Dorries, Andrew Bridgen and Simon Clarke.
Tory Eurosceptic Jacob Rees-Mogg signalled an all-out assault on Mrs May by telling a pack of reporters (pictured) that he had sent a no-confidence letter
Alan Duncan (left) and Nicky Morgan (right) were among the Conservative MPs who came out in support of Mrs May last night. Minister Mr Duncan said the hardline Brexiteer plotters were making Britain 'ungovernable'
The political chaos sparked the biggest one-day fall in the pound this year, which prompted City regulators to hold calls with major banks to assess just how febrile conditions were on the financial markets.
The uncertainty sparked anger among a string of moderate Tories last night, with Foreign Office minister Sir Alan Duncan warning the hardliners they were making Britain 'ungovernable', while chief whip Julian Smith said Mrs May would 'not be bullied'.
Moderate loyalists accused Mr Rees-Mogg of being ‘self indulgent’ and warned he risked ‘wrecking’ the Government and splitting the party.
Sir Alan told rebel MPs to 'stop and think and realise the gravity of what they're playing with at the moment'. He added: 'If they try to replace the Prime Minister, they risk destroying the Government and perhaps for a long time also the Conservative Party, all of which would take place in the middle of unconcluded Brexit negotiations.'
Solicitor general Robert Buckland said: 'I am fed up with knee-jerk reactions from people who have not read the detail or are deliberately misrepresenting it.'
Former education secretary Nicky Morgan said: 'A pragmatic Conservative leader trying to govern in the national interest gets knifed by Tory Brexiteers – it's so familiar. Exactly when does this end so we actually get on with governing for the whole country?'
Alistair Burt, a Foreign Office minister, accused plotters of trying to 'detonate' a deal designed to secure people's livelihoods, and Tory grandee Sir Nicholas Soames accused plotters of 'desperate showboating' and said it was a 'point of honour' to 'see them off'.
Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson said he had 'every confidence' the deal would deliver a good Brexit and paid tribute to Mrs May, telling the Mail: 'The Prime Minister has been unwavering in that commitment. Her sense of duty, her real strength and her constant drive to deliver that is something that everyone admires.'
A defiant Mrs May (pictured in Downing Street today) told MPs that she would carry on in the 'national interest', despite admitting the compromises involved were not 'comfortable'
On Thursday night, even some members of the ERG disagreed with the bid to oust the Prime Minister. Tory MPs discussing whether to put letters in on a private WhatsApp group were deeply divided.
Sir Edward Leigh acknowledged there were 'differences' within the group over the approach and said he would not be submitting a letter of no confidence, adding: 'These issues are so complex that one should not deal with them on a personal basis.'
Mr Raab said he did not want to see a leadership contest now, telling the Mail: 'The letters and all that are the wrong thing to do. I want her to make a success of Brexit but she needs to change course.'
In the Commons, Mrs May appealed to MPs on all sides to examine the plans before turning against them. And she vowed to press ahead regardless of how many members of the Cabinet resign.
'Voting against a deal would take us all back to square one,' she said.
The Prime Minister used a press conference in Downing Street to double down on her determination to press ahead with her controversial pact with the EU.
Despite seven high-profile resignations and the near-certain prospect of a Tory no-confidence vote in her leadership after Jacob Rees-Mogg joined calls, Mrs May insisted she would keep 'putting the national interest first'.
'I believe with every fibre in my body that the course I have set out is the right one,' she said.
Mr Raab revealed his resignation on Twitter today (left) saying he could not 'in good conscience' support the Brexit deal. It came less than two hours after Shailesh Vara quit as Northern Ireland minister (right)
She admitted that the burden of leadership was 'heavy' at the best of times and even tougher when Brexit pervaded every part of the UK economically and socially.
Laying down the gauntlet to her critics, Mrs May said: 'Nobody has proposed any alternative proposal that honours the referendum and protects the border in Northern Ireland.'
She listed the things her would achieve: 'Full control of our borders, by bringing an end to the free movement of people – once and for all. Full control of our money, so we decide ourselves how to spend it on priorities like our NHS. Full control of our laws, by ending the jurisdiction of the European Court of Justice in the United Kingdom. Getting us out of the Common Agricultural Policy and Common Fisheries Policy for good.'
Asked if she would fight on even if she only wins a Tory no-confidence ballot by one vote, Mrs May retorted: 'Am I going to see this through? Yes.'
She now faces a gruelling month as she prepares to nail down the exit deal at a summit in Brussels, negotiate a future trade agreement and attempt to get the deal through Parliament, while trying to fend off an attempted coup. Allies last night insisted she remained ‘remarkably resilient’.
Former minister Nick Boles, who has battled cancer, said he did not agree with the PM’s Brexit plans, but added: ‘I don’t think I have even a tenth of the grit and resilience of the woman who is our Prime Minister. I take my hat off to her.’
The stand came after Dominic Raab and Esther McVey poured petrol on the raging Brexit row this morning by resigning in protest at her fledgling deal, which she forced through Cabinet during a fraught five-hour meeting last night.
They accused her of bowing to EU 'blackmail' and failing to honour the result of the referendum - with a series of other junior ministers also falling on their swords.
In devastating exchanges in the Commons minutes after the bombshells dropped, the premier was then mauled by MPs from all sides over her 'dogs dinner' plan.
And Tory Eurosceptic Jacob Rees-Mogg signalled an all-out assault declaring he has written to the powerful Tory 1922 committee demanding a no-confidence vote. Some 16 letters have been submitted publicly so far, but they claim they have crested the threshold of 48 for triggering a ballot..
The chaos sent the Pound plunging as markets took fright at the chances of a Brexit deal receding.
In an emotional opening passage, Mrs May stressed her sense of duty to deliver Brexit in the best way for the country.
'Serving in high office is an honour and privilege. It is also a heavy responsibility – that is true at any time but especially when the stakes are so high,' she said.
'And negotiating the UK's Withdrawal of the EU after some 40 years and building from the ground up a new and enduring relationship for the good of our children and grandchildren is a matter of the highest consequence.
'It touches almost every area of our national life – a whole economy and virtually every job - the livelihoods of our fellow citizens, our integrity as a United Kingdom of four nations, our safety and security – all of these are at stake.'
Told that the Commons and her own party seemed overwhelmingly opposed to the Brexit plan she is championing, Mrs May said: 'Leadership is about taking the right decisions, not the easy ones.
'As Prime Minister my job is to bring back a deal which delivers on the vote of the British people. That does that by ending free movement – all the things I raised in my statement, ending free movement, ensuring we are not sending vast annual sums to the EU any longer, ending the jurisdiction of the European Court of Justice, but that also protects jobs, protects people's livelihoods, protects our security, protects the union of the United Kingdom.
'I believe this is a deal that does deliver that, which is in the national interest.'
Mrs May - a keen cricket fan - also compared herself to her hero Geoffrey Boycott, who was known for his obstinate and slow-scoring innings. 'He stuck to it, and got the runs in the end,' she joked.
At a meeting of the powerful Conservative ERG group this afternoon also attended by Boris Johnson, Mr Rees-Mogg confirmed that he had put in his letter, saying Mrs May had 'failed to meet her promises' and it was 'too late' for her to turn it around.
And at a press conference afterwards he denying mounting a 'coup' but said: 'This is not Brexit. This is a failure of government policy.'
The hardline Brexiteer ruled out running in any leadership contest - picking out Boris Johnson, Dominic Raab, David Davis and Penny Mordaunt as contenders.
MailOnline has learned government whips are now canvassing MPs on which way they will vote - suggesting they believe the trigger threshold of 48 letters has been reached. Downing Street insisted she will fight if a challenge is held. If she does not secure backing from a majority of MPs a full leadership contest would be triggered.
A party vote of no confidence would take a matter of days. But if May loses, a leadership contest could take months - although some MPs claim it can be done in as little as two weeks.
In an another day of fast-moving high drama at Westminster:
Despite Brexiteer and Remainer MPs from across parties lining up to condemn her plans in the Commons, the PM defiantly pledged she would carry on in the 'national interest' even if the compromises involved were not 'comfortable'.
'I will bring it to Parliament and ask MPs to consider it in the national interest,' she said.
'The choice is clear. We can choose to leave with no deal. We can have no Brexit at all. Or we can choose to unite and support the best deal that can be negotiated.'
'I choose to deliver for the British people. I choose to do what is in the national interest.'
But barely any MPs spoke up for Mrs May's position - further fuelling fears of a fatal threat to her leadership.
In signs of increasing desperation, there are claims that Mrs May offered Michael Gove the Brexit Secretary job in a bid to stop him walking out - but he turned it down.
Despite ERG head Mr Rees-Mogg, former minister Steve Baker and backbencher Henry Smith confirming their letters had gone in, other senior figures said there was still a 'difference of opinion' over whether Mrs May should be challenged.
Veteran Brexiteer Sir Edward Leigh said: 'If you succeed in this coup detat you just strengthen her opinion. There is also the question of loyalty. The problem is intractable.
'I believe we should stop this deal by voting it down in Parliament.'
'Indeed it doesn't meet the tests you set from the outset of your premiership,' she added.
Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab (left) dropped the bombshell news on the morning after the PM forced the terms of her proposed plan through Cabinet in a stormy five-hour meeting. Esther McVey (right) followed suit with her resignation shortly afterwards
Mrs May faced an agonising barrage from Eurosceptics today as questions mounted about whether she can hold her Brexit deal together
In interviews today, Mr Raab played down calls for a change in the leadership saying he had 'respect' for Mrs May and 'supports this Prime Minister'.
'I remain loyal to this Prime Minister, I want her to stay in office,' he told Sky News.
Mr Raab is understood to have endorsed the draft deal 'with a heavy heart' at a fraught five-hour Cabinet meeting yesterday, but harboured deep concerns about the UK being locked into the Irish border 'backstop'.
In his resignation letter, Mr Raab - who only succeeded David Davis in the post in July - said he had 'enduring respect' for Mrs May but added: 'I cannot in good conscience support the terms proposed for our deal with the EU.'
Ms McVey, who made what was described as an 'emotional' assault on the Brexit deal during Cabinet yesterday, said in her letter that it did not 'honour the result of the referendum'.
The resignations came in quick succession after Northern Ireland minister Shailesh Vara announced his departure, this morning claiming Mrs May is trying to 'shackle' Britain to the EU 'indefinitely'.
Brexit minister Suella Braverman has quit, as has ministerial aide Anne-Marie Trevelyan - a strong supporter of Boris Johnson.
Aid Secretary Penny Mordaunt is also believed to be on the edge. She was in the Commons chamber this morning answering questions on her brief.
Fevered speculation erupted after Mr Gove cancelled a visit in Yorkshire, although aides insisted it was for personal reasons. They did not respond to questions about whether he was quitting.
As rumours swept Westminster today, there are claims Mr Gove has been offered the Brexit Secretary job but is insisting he should be able to renegotiate the deal with the EU.
Remainer Tory MP Anna Soubry said Mr Raab's resignation 'marks the end of PMs Withdrawal Agreement' and called for a 'government of national unity'.
The mounting crisis is on the verge of torpedoing the entire package painstakingly thrashed out with Brussels over two years - and throwing Mrs May herself out of power.
EU council leader Donald Tusk nodded to the problems this morning as he said a summit to sign off the deal will happen on November 25 'if nothing extraordinary happens'.
In a pointed aside later, he told reporters later: 'The EU is prepared for a final deal with the United Kingdom in November,' he told a news conference in Brussels.
'We are also prepared for a no-deal scenario but of course we are best prepared for a no-Brexit scenario.'
In his resignation letter, Mr Raab said: 'I regret to say that, following the Cabinet meeting yesterday on the Brexit deal, I must resign.
'I understand why you have chosen to pursue the deal with the EU on the terms proposed, and I respect the different views held in good faith by all of our colleagues.
'For my part, I cannot support the proposed deal for two reasons. First, I believe that the regulatory regime proposed for Northern Ireland presents a very real threat to the integrity of the United Kingdom.
'Second, I cannot support an indefinite backstop arrangement, where the EU holds a veto over our ability to exit.
'The terms of the backstop amount to a hybrid of the EU Customs Union and Single Market obligations.
Aid Secretary Penny Mordaunt is also believed to be on the edge, but she was in the Commons chamber this morning answering questions on her brief
'No democratic nation has ever signed up to be bound by such an extensive regime, imposed externally without any democratic control over the laws to be applied, nor the ability to decide to exit the arrangement.
'That arrangement is no also taken as the starting point for negotiating the Future Economic partnership.
'If we accept that, it will severely prejudice the second phase of negotiations against the UK.'
Mr Vara said the draft agreement 'leaves the UK in a halfway house with no time limit on when we will finally be a sovereign nation'.
In an eviscerating resignation letter he added: 'We are a proud nation and it is a sad day when we are reduced to obeying rules made by other countries who have shown that they do not have our best interests at heart. We must and can do better than this'.
Mrs May acknowledged last night that she has 'difficult days' ahead with Brexiteers in her party openly plotting to topple her - while warning: 'It is this or Jeremy Corbyn.'
But Mrs May appeared unprepared for the sheer volume of fury that greeted her in the Commons today.
The DUP's deputy leader Nigel Dodds accused her of failing to 'listen' and putting the United Kingdom at risk.
He told MPs: 'I could today stand here and take the Prime Minister through the list of promises and pledges she made to this house and to us, privately, about the future of Northern Ireland in the future relationship with the EU.
'But I fear it would be a waste of time since she clearly doesn't listen.'
He went on: 'The choice is now clear: we stand up for the United Kingdom, the whole of the United Kingdom, the integrity of the United Kingdom, or we vote for a vassal state with the breakup of the United Kingdom, that is the choice.'
Tory Eurosceptic Mark Francois told her she must recognise that her Brexit plan is 'dead on arrival'.
During the three Just a handful of MPs spoke up in support - underlining the depth of her problems.
And a jubilant Mr Corbyn punched the bruise, despite his own party being in a shambles over Brexit.
'After two years of bungled negotiations the Government has produced a botched deal that breaches the Prime Minister's own red lines and does not meet our six tests,' he told MPs.
'The Government is in chaos. Their deal risks leaving the country in an indefinite halfway house without a real say.
'When even the last Brexit Secretary, who theoretically at least negotiated the deal, says 'I cannot support the proposed deal', what faith does that give anyone else in this place or in this country?
'The Government simply cannot put to Parliament this half-baked deal that both the Brexit Secretary and his predecessor have rejected.
'No-deal is not a real option and the Government has not seriously prepared for it.'
Mr Rees-Mogg said last night that he was 'closer than ever' to sending a letter of no-confidence to the 1922 Committee chairman - a threat on which he has now made good.
Speaking to journalists today, Mr Rees-Mogg said the leader can change in quickly, adding: 'I think the process can be sped up'.
Asked who he would like to see as leader, he said: 'We will have to see who throws their hat in the ring. It needs to be somebody who believes in Brexit. We have seen from Mrs May's experience that leading when you don't believe in Brexit makes it very difficult because you make the wrong compromises.'
He said he would not run, saying: 'This is not why I am sending in the letter. It has never been about me it has always been about Brexit.'
But he said that many of the Cabinet ministers who have quit over Brexit would be good leaders.
He said: 'Dominic Raab is a very impressive individual who has shown his courage through his resignation.
'Boris Johnson is a very impressive individual, ditto, Penny Mordaunt, ditto, Esther McVey is absolutely splendid. And it just shows the widespread ability the Conservative Party has – the very good people we have who would make very fine leaders.'
He said if a new leader is elected they should return to Brussels and say 'look you have offered us a free trade deal, we are happy to make a financial settlement in return for it'.
Mr Rees-Mogg published his letter as he urged Tory MPs to oust her over the controversial Brexit plan with the EU
Asked about how many letters he thinks have gone in, Mr Rees-Mogg said: 'I think the number is growing. And unexpected people are putting them in.
'I have put it in and I have done it publicly because I think when you do something like that you ought to be open about it. It is a very important decision.'
'The key is that people don't want this dl. As you discovered in the Chamber of the House of Commons there is absolutely no support for this deal.'
Asked what the chances are that the PM will survive, he said: 'It is always difficult. They turn out to be like weather forecasts.'
At a chaotic press conference, Mr Rees-Mogg said that he believed the necessary 48 letters to trigger a vote of no confidence in the Prime Minister would be submitted, but declined to put a timeframe on the process.
If Mrs May was rejected by MPs, a vote to choose her successor could be conducted in 'not months but weeks', he said.
Asked why he was defying calls for party unity, he said: 'People always call for unity when the policy they are following is wrong.
'It is a standard pattern of Conservatives when they note that failure is in the air.'
He said that Dominic Raab should not be blamed for the deal negotiated with Brussels, as it was clear that the process was driven by Downing Street.
There was no point appointing a new Brexit Secretary, he said.
Mr Rees-Mogg said: 'The key is, if 48 letters go in it shows there are 48 people who will not vote for this deal.
'That in itself is a pretty powerful statement.'
He stressed that the European Research Group did not have a collective position on Mrs May's premiership.
Asked what his message to the Prime Minister was, he said: 'The Prime Minister said at the 1922 Committee after the election that she would serve as long as the Conservative Party wanted her to serve.
'I think there are many people in the Conservative Party, not just in Parliament but in the country at large, who feel that her service now should come to an end.
'She is a very dutiful person, she has served the country to the best of her ability but she has let us down in this deal.
'It has not delivered on what she said she would do.
'That is the key thing - it is trust that is at the heart of it. She didn't do what she said she would.'
Asked if Mrs May had lied, he said 'lied is a very harsh word'.
Senior Tories have voiced alarm that Mrs May is opening a door to Jeremy Corbyn becoming PM by sacrificing the support of the DUP in a bid to push through her 'nightmare' Brexit deal.
'We cannot survive without the DUP,' one senior MP told MailOnline. 'And this deal cannot get through unless sufficient Labour MPs vote for it.
'Corbyn smells defeat and I'm sure he will not throw her a lifeline.'
Mr Corbyn seized on the PM's weakness in the Commons today, confirming that Labour MPs will be whipped to vote against the package.
The commitment further reduces the chances of Mrs May being able to get it through in a critical Commons showdown expected in the middle of next month - if the deal survives that long.
Meanwhile in Brussels Mr Tusk revealed the EU's 27 leaders would rush to ratify the deal in ten days time - but there are still major doubts it will survive that long.
Speaking this morning he confirmed an emergency summit will take place on Sunday November 25 and said: 'Let me say to our British friends: as much as I am sad to see you leave, I will do everything to make this farewell the least painful possible, both for you and for us'.
Last night the PM emerged from a marathon Cabinet meeting to claim a decisive breakthrough and said her cabinet came to a collective decision to back the settlement with Brussels having apparently told them it was 'this or Jeremy Corbyn'
But at least 10 ministers in the bruising five-hour meeting spoke out against parts of her deal.
The cabinet meeting is said to have exploded when Ms McVey called for a formal ministerial vote during the tempestuous debate over the draft agreement before Mrs May rebuffed her.
Others who declared themselves against the plans included International Trade Minister Liam Fox, Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson and Home Secretary Sajid Javid.
After the Cabinet battle, which went on three hours longer than scheduled, the premier took to the steps of Downing Street admitting that the debate had been 'long and impassioned' and there were 'difficult days ahead'.
'The collective decision of Cabinet was that the government should agree the draft Withdrawal Agreement and the outline political declaration,' Mrs May said. 'I firmly believe with my head and heart that this decisive choice is in the best interests of the entire UK.'
Mrs May's reference to a 'collective' decision rather than a unanimous one immediately raised eyebrows. Around 10 ministers - nearly a third of the total - are understood to have spoken out against parts of the package, amid reports that a no confidence vote against the PM could be triggered as early as today.
Ms Mordaunt, who was thought to be among those closest to quitting, demanded assurances from the premier on key points. Defence Secretary Gavin Willliamson also expressed reservations about elements of the deal, as did Sajid Javid, Liam Fox, Jeremy Hunt and Andrea Leadsom.
But one Cabinet source told MailOnline that Ms McVey was an 'outlier' in the strength of her opposition, and appeared 'emotional'.
Scottish Secretary David Mundell had emerged as a potential risk after he signed a letter warning against giving away fishing rights as part of the agreement, but tonight confirmed that he was staying in the tent.
An ex-minister told MailOnline: 'I think a few people are holding off, will read the deal, square off their associations this weekend, then put in a letter.'
Ms McVey (left) and Mr Raab (right) announced their resignations in quick succession - raising the threat of more to follow
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News Pictures Furious backlash against attempt to depose Theresa May
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