Brexit votes: MPs fail to back proposals again
MPs have again failed to agree on proposals for the next steps in the Brexit process.
The Commons voted on four motions for leaving the EU, including a customs union and a Norway-style arrangement - keeping the UK in the single market - but none gained a majority.
The votes were not legally binding, so the government would not have been forced to adopt the proposals.
The plan Theresa May negotiated with the EU has been rejected three times.
Mrs May now has until 12 April to either seek a longer extension from the EU to take a different course or decide to leave the EU without a deal.
She will meet her cabinet on Tuesday morning to discuss what to do next - as BBC political correspondent Vicky Young says.
The option defeated by the narrowest margin was a proposal for a customs union, losing by only three votes.
That would see the UK remain in the same system of tariffs - taxes - on goods as the rest of the EU - potentially simplifying the issue of the Northern Ireland border, but preventing the UK from striking independent trade deals with other countries.
The motion calling for a confirmatory referendum received the most votes in favour, totalling 280, but still lost by a margin of 12.
Following the failure of his own motion to stay in the Single Market - known as Common Market 2.0 - Nick Boles resigned from the Conservative Party.
In a point of order following the results, the MP for Grantham and Stamford said he could "no longer sit for this party", adding: "I have done everything I can to find a compromise."
As he left the Commons, MPs were heard shouting, "don't go Nick", and others applauded him.
He later tweeted that he would remain an MP and sit in the Commons as "an Independent Progressive Conservative".