The ayes to the right, 318.
The noes to the left, 310.
[Cheering]
The ayes to the right, 318.
The noes to the left, 310.
So the ayes have it.
The ayes have it.
It is now clear that there
is a route than can secure
a substantial and sustainable ...
[Cheering]
Substantial and sustainable
majority in this House
for leaving the EU
with a deal.
We will now take this mandate
forward and seek to obtain
legally-binding changes to
[the] withdrawal agreement
that deal with concerns
on the backstop,
while guaranteeing no hard ...
No return to a hard border between
Northern Ireland and Ireland.
And my colleagues and I
will talk to the EU
about how we address
the House's views.
Simply opposing no deal
is not enough to stop it.
The government will now
redouble its efforts
to get a deal that this House
can support in light
of defeat of the
right honourable member,
the leader of the opposition's
amendment, I again invite him
to take up my offer of the meeting
to see if we can find a way forward.
Mr Speaker, if this House can
come together, we can deliver
the decision the British people
took in June 2016,
restore faith in our democracy
and get on with building
a country that works
for everyone.
And as prime minister,
I will work with members
across the House
to do just that.
Could I say that we are prepared
to meet her to put forward ...
[Noise]
To put forward the points of view
from the Labour party of the kind
of agreement we want
with the European Union
to protect jobs,
to protect living standards
and to protect rights
and conditions in this country.
It's exactly the offer
that was made last September,
exactly the offer
that was made two weeks ago
and I look forward to meeting
the prime minister to set out
those views to her
on behalf of my party.
