British Prime Minister Theresa May and opposition Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn on Wednesday warmed up for their long-awaited meeting to discuss the way ahead on the UK's divorce deal with the European Union by clashing in the House of Commons.
At Prime Minister's Questions, Corbyn repeatedly urged May to rule out a no-deal Brexit and to ditch her "red lines" in any upcoming talks with Brussels.
May hit back by saying that Corbyn "has no plan for Brexit".
The two leaders will meet privately later to seek common ground on Brexit, less than two months before the UK's formal divorce from the 28-member trading bloc.
Corbyn agreed to the meeting because MPs voted against the idea of a no-deal Brexit on Tuesday. He had previously ruled out such a meeting unless May ruled out a no-deal Brexit herself.
At the Prime Minister's Questions, he said May may have succeeded in "temporarily uniting her very divided party" in Tuesday's votes on amendments to her plan but she had to make "more important compromises" to "unite the country".
May said Corbyn was a "fine one to talk about coming together", when he had only now agreed to meet her, after MPs took part in a series of votes on possible changes to her Brexit plan.
She said the majority of MPs had identified the Irish backstop as the main sticking point preventing them from backing her deal, whereas Corbyn's Brexit proposals had been rejected.
"He has no plan for Brexit, no good plan for our economy and no plan for our country," she told MPs.
Lawmakers voted 317 to 301 in favour of changing the backstop plan - the section of May's deal with the EU designed to avoid the return of Northern Ireland border checks.
Corbyn asked May whether, if she did not agree a deal with Brussels that MPs would support, she would back Labour's proposals for a "a strong single market, comprehensive customs union and the guaranteeing of rights and protections rather than the alternative she has been threatening - to crash out with no-deal".
Prime Minister May told him: "You cannot just vote to reject no deal, you have to support a deal."
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