Labour will call a no-confidence vote in Theresa May if she loses the crunch Commons showdown over her Brexit deal, Sir Keir Starmer said today.
The shadow Brexit secretary confirmed the party will 'inevitably' try to collapse the government in the wake of what looks like a near-certain defeat in the Commons on December 11.
But Sir Keir also hinted that his favoured outcome is a second referendum - suggesting staying in the EU should be an option in the ballot, and no-deal Brexit should not be.
The frantic political manoeuvring comes as the PM fights desperately to salvage the package that she thrashed out with Brussels.
More than 100 Tory MPs have vowed to oppose the deal, along with Labour, the SNP and Lib Dems - putting her on course for catastrophic loss in the Commons crunch in nine days' time.


Shadow Brexit secretary Keir Starmer confirmed the party will 'inevitably' try to collapse the government in the wake of what looks like a near-certain defeat in the Commons


The PM (pictured at the G20 summit in Argentina last night) is fighting to limit the information disclosed about the government's legal advice on the package she agreed with Brussels
She again voiced defiance overnight, insisting MPs must act in the national interest and back her plan, or risk chaos that could result in no deal or no Brexit at all.
Speaking on Sky News' Ridge on Sunday, Sir Keir said he expected a no-confidence motion would be tabled in the Commons if she loses on December 11.
'It seems to me that if the Prime Minister has lost a vote of that sort of significance then there has to be a question of confidence in the Government,' he said.
'I think it's inevitable that we will seek to move that - obviously it will depend on what actually happens in nine days, it will depend on what the response is - but if she's lost a vote of this significance after two years of negotiation, then it is right that there should be a general election.
'Because, but for the Fixed Term Parliaments Act, the convention was always if a Government loses what's called a confidence vote - something of such significance - then that Government has to go.'
Sir Keir - who is thought to be among senior Labour figures pushing Jeremy Corbyn to endorse a second referendum - again appeared to play up the idea.
He insisted his view was that Remain should be an option in any ballot.
And he suggested crashing out of the EU without any deal should be off the table.
'I would be worried about that,' he said. 'I think the option of no deal would be catastrophic for the country.'
Demands for a second referendum are mounting after the dramatic resignation of universities minister Sam Gyimah over the weekend. He said he backed what campaigners have tried to brand a 'People's Vote'.
Sir Keir and deputy Labour leader Tom Watson are thought to be ramping up pressure on Mr Corbyn to back a fresh national ballot.
The party says its favoured option is for a general election - but has left the referendum is on the table if that is not possible.
Under the Fixed Term Parliaments Act, to force a general election Mrs May would need to lose a Commons confidence vote - but there would then be 14 days for the Tories to form another government and win a confidence vote.
Mrs May is facing a potentially catastrophic Brexit clash even before the crunch Brexit vote, as Tory rebels unite with the DUP and Labour to demand full legal advice on her deal is released.
She is fighting to limit the information disclosed about the opinion of Attorney General Geoffrey Cox on the package she has thrashed out with Brussels.
The eminent QC and strident Brexiteer was a key figure in forcing the deal through the Cabinet - but there are claims his formal advice was far bleaker and he warned the UK would be stuck 'indefinitely' in the Irish border backstop.
Mr Cox is due to make a statement to the Commons tomorrow setting out his position on the agreement with the EU.
But ministers have insisted they will only release a summary of his written advice as the full material would break convention and undermine the operation of government.




Labour has been demanding the release of the full legal advice from Attorney General Geoffrey Cox (right) on the Brexit deal. Jeremy Corbyn (pictured on the This Morning sofa last week) is under mounting pressure to back a second Brexit referendum
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News Pictures Labour WILL call confidence vote in May if she loses crunch Commons Brexit showdown
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