WEST Dorset MP, Sir Oliver Letwin, the architect of the plan for a series of indicative Commons votes on Brexit, has warned the UK could be heading for a no-deal break on April 12, unless MPs rally behind one of the alternatives to Theresa May's deal.

MPs are due to hold a second round of votes on Monday - unless Mrs May can get her deal through first - after none of the eight options debated on Wednesday was able to command a majority.

Here's how your MP voted on the options presented to the House of Commons last night.

Sir Oliver said: "At some point or other we either have to get her deal across the line or accept that we have to find some alternative if we want to avoid no deal on the 12th, which I think at the moment is the most likely thing to happen.

"At the moment we are heading for a situation where, under the law, we leave without a deal on the 12th, which many of us think is not a good solution, and the question is 'Is Parliament on Monday willing to come to any view in the majority about that way forward that doesn't involve that result?'"

Shadow work and pensions secretary Rebecca Long-Bailey has said Labour is ready to work with other parties to resolve the Brexit deadlock.

"What is imperative now is that parties across the House - and certainly Jeremy (Corbyn) is going to be doing that before Monday - work with each other to find reasonable compromises to try to navigate a way out of this," she said.

"If the Government can't find a majority - and there isn't a majority for anything in Parliament - the only option to take things forward is a general election.

"I know there are many MPs who don't agree with that synopsis so in order to overcome this impasse we have got to reach a compromise."

Brexit supporters descended early on Parliament Square to place 34 Union flags in a spot usually occupied by EU flags, before the Remain voters had arrived.

David Ireland, 41, and three others, arrived at around 6am on Thursday armed with the custom made flags to find no EU ones there.

They swiftly moved to set up all 34 around the television cameras outside the Houses of Parliament.

The Remain campaigners arrived at 7.30am, and began placing their flags around the Union flags.

Mr Ireland said: "People turn on the TV and see this entire wall covered in EU flags, some people want to be in the EU but there's also some people who don't want to be in the EU, so we've come along and done our flags.

"What the Remain voters do is shun all the Leave campaigners into the irrelevant middle ground and dominate the TV space.

"The narrative was this is the EU zone, we own this, but it seemed a little bit one-sided."

Asked if he would do the same tomorrow, he added: "I've got a job, I can't do this all the time like they do."