British Prime Minister Theresa May defended her decision to open talks with the opposition in a bid to deliver Brexit or risk letting it "slip through our fingers".
In a statement on Saturday night, May said she "had to take a new approach" to win a parliamentary majority backing the agreement that she reached with Brussels in November.
In a statement, May said: "The longer this takes, the greater the risk of the UK never leaving at all. It would mean letting the Brexit the British people voted for slip through our fingers.
"I will not stand for that. It is essential we deliver what people voted for and to do that we need to get a deal over the line."
Britain is due to leave the EU on April 12, but Parliament has failed to reach agreement on any deal, while also rejecting the option of leaving without a deal.

Death toll from Venezuela quakes rises to 3,535 as thousands remain displaced
Russian strikes kill 26, exposing Ukraine air-defence shortages
Clashes escalate at Sri Lanka prison to leave 25 dead, many more injured
Six killed in India's Mumbai as rains wreak havoc, disrupt travel
Wildfire in southern France forces 10,000 people from their homes