What are indicative votes?published at 16:31 Greenwich Mean Time 26 March 2019
A series of indicative votes in Parliament could offer a possible way out of the Brexit deadlock.
Read MoreMPs vote by 286 to 344 to reject the government’s withdrawal agreement - on the day the UK was due to leave the EU
The Commons has been debating a motion on the terms of the UK's exit
The political declaration, which sets out the future relationship, was not considered
The vote - the third time the government had been defeated over its deal - throws the UK’s plans into more confusion
Theresa May says the result will have "grave" implications and the "legal default" was that the UK would leave the EU on 12 April
Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn urges the PM to call an election
Thousands of Leave supporters gather outside Parliament to protest against Brexit delay
Joseph Lee, Katie Wright, Francesca Gillett and Sarah Collerton
A series of indicative votes in Parliament could offer a possible way out of the Brexit deadlock.
Read MoreBBC 5 live presenter tweets...
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Still confused as MPs gear up for the indicative vote process?
Follow our latest flow chart to plot out possible scenarios on Brexit.
The Independent's chief political commentator tweets...
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BBC News website readers have been in touch with ideas on possible ways forward.
Fiona Bullock: "If we end up with another referendum as has been indicated, then it should be made mandatory that everyone who is entitled to vote should do so. We will then get a true picture of what the country wants. Well hopefully."
Peter Davis: "As Parliament cannot come to a conclusion on any vote, then why can’t the PM take the vote away from Parliament and just go to EU headquarters and sign the deal. Finish."
Gerald Cooper: "I do not agree with Parliament's actions yesterday, nor a second referendum. If the people are to be given an opportunity to influence the outcome of Brexit, it should be in the form of a snap general election in order to provide one party or another with a mandate to govern."
Roy Jenkinson: "My solution to the Brexit problem would be to cancel Article 50 and then allow Parliament the chance to find an acceptable process to leave the EU, then to re-apply... in say two years time with a firm idea of what we want."
BBC political editor tweets...
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The Financial Times' chief political correspondent tweets...
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The Independent's chief political commentator tweets...
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BBC political correspondent tweets...
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The BBC's Brussels reporter Adam Fleming has done sterling work by recording a version of the Brexit deal for fans of ASMR - that's the YouTube phenomenon that relaxes viewers with a variety of "triggers", like whispering and tapping.
Here's his preview of it. The full video can be found here, external.
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Theresa May's efforts to secure parliamentary approval of her Brexit deal has not been helped by a poll suggesting that public faith in her negotiations has dramatically fallen since 2017, the professor in charge of the research says.
The NatCen Social Research poll found both 66% of Leavers and 64% of Remainers were as likely to think the deal was bad.
Sir John Curtice, professor of politics at Strathclyde University, told the BBC: "We are now in a situation that those who voted leave - voters who the prime minister is trying to satisfy by implementing their wish to leave the European Union - they are now as critical as those who voted for remain.
"That illustrates one of the problems for the prime minister... trying to convince her MPs that her deal is the only way of meeting the aspirations of leave voters is rather more difficult when those very leave voters themselves seem to deny that proposition."
You can read more about Sir John's findings here: What do voters make of Brexit now?
BBC Radio 5 Live
Leena Naik owns the Aashiqui sari shop on Stratford Road in Sparkhill, Birmingham.
She voted Remain and says she's "really scared, because we don't know what's going to happen after".
She has children at university, and says: "I want it done, so if it's 12 April without a deal, get it done. We need to move forward, it's happened now.
"All you hear every day is Brexit, Brexit - I think it needs to be dealt with and then we just move on. And then whatever happens, we deal with it.”
House of Commons
Parliament
Without a division, MPs approve the Lords amendments to the Brexit-related healthcare bill.
Business in the Commons moves away from Brexit for the moment, as MPs debate the Offensive Weapons Bill - legislation to ban certain kinds of dangerous weapon.
This afternoon they are debating Lords amendments which create a 'trusted couriers scheme' to allow some deliveries of bladed items through the post.
Political correspondent for The Telegraph tweets...
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The process for Wednesday's indicative votes has been tweeted by Hilary Benn.
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But as noted in the replies to his tweets, the date at the top is 18 March rather than 27.
BBC Radio 5 Live
Becky (left) runs an art shop in Aberystwyth with her business partner Liz. They have been working together for seven years and opened their shop 18 months ago, selling wholesale to other shops across Wales.
Becky told BBC Radio 5 Live, external: “I wish the government could get on with running the country – there are so many problems with schools and education and the health service… I wish we could just go now.
“I am sure all businesses have prepared for a no-deal, and if no-deal is what has to happen, let’s just go and let’s work around it.
Becky voted to Remain in the referendum, but said now the decision has been made, "we need to take the consequences".
She said she thinks taking no-deal off the table was a mistake: "There’s no negotiation now… it’s an absolute shambles. I am naturally very left [politically], but it’s making me feel sympathy for a Conservative leader which I never thought I would.
“It’s like divorce – you just agree to anything in the end because you just want it over and done with.”
Vicki Young
Chief Political Correspondent
Tomorrow's line-up will be Prime Ministers' Questions at 12:00 GMT, followed by the indicative votes (no times have been given for those yet).
Theresa May could have another attempt at winning support for her deal on Thursday - the very latest she could try is Friday.
Labour MP Catherine McKinnell criticises Theresa May, saying she has shown she does not implement what Parliament wants nor wants to listen to them.
She does not recognise you need to work across party lines, she says, adding that she has had no conversation with Mrs May.
The difficulty with the PM's approach, she says, is that even now she's in listening mode - which has only happened in the last few weeks - she has not changed her mind "one little bit".
If Parliament can come to some cross-party agreement, either way it needs to go back to the public, she says, now that everyone knows more about what Brexit means.
House of Commons
Parliament
The SNP's Philippa Whitford says her party will not be opposing the passage of the post-Brexit healthcare bill, describing it as "necessary".
She says it is important that ministers negotiate new healthcare rights for after Brexit, but warns they are likely to be "much more limited" than currently.
"Reciprocal healthcare was not designed around a stag weekend in Prague, it was literally to facilitate freedom of movement", she says.
"To me this bill highlights what we're losing with Brexit", she adds.
Political correspondent at Sky tweets
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