Jeremy Corbyn accepts Theresa May’s challenge to debate Brexit live on TV

Jeremy Corbyn has accepted Theresa May’s challenge to the Labour leader to debate Brexit live on national TV.

The Prime Minister is frantically trying to sell her deal and sees a primetime Sunday night debate as a way to persuade the public.

“Jeremy would relish a head-to-head debate with Theresa May about her botched Brexit deal and the future of the country,” a Labour spokesman said.

If agreed the show could happen on Sunday 9 December – days before the crucial Commons vote.

The debate would form part of the PM’s national offensive with speeches planned on different aspects of the deal in all four nations of the country in the coming days.

The reports come despite chicken Mrs May ducking calls for TV debates during last year’s general election.

At the time she dismissed the value of TV debates saying”I don’t think people get much out of seeing politicians having a go at each other” and said Mr Corbyn “ought to be paying a little more attention to thinking about Brexit negotiations.”

But the Prime Minister is now relying on winning over the public in a bid to convince wavering MPs to back her.

On Monday afternoon she will tell a hostile House of Commons “with absolute certainty” that “there is not a better deal available”.

The Prime Minister, who will chair a meeting of her Cabinet on Monday morning, will warn rejecting her deal will “open the door to more division and uncertainty, with all the risks that will entail”.

At a historic summit in Brussels on Sunday, the leaders of the remaining 27 member states took less than 40 minutes to approve the deal.

Following the announcement European Commission president insisted that the deal was the UK’s only option.

On Monday morning Jean Claude-Juncker insisted again that there will be no more negotiation.

He told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “This is the only deal possible. So, if the House (of Commons) says no, we would have no deal.”

Mrs May will now put it to a vote of MPs before Christmas but faces a battle to get it through the House of Commons in the face of intense opposition on both the Leave and Remain-supporting wings of her party.

She has already started a campaign of selling her deal directly to the public in the hope their support can win round MPs opposed to the plan before the Commons vote, expected in the week beginning December 10.

In her Commons statement the Prime Minister will say: “Our duty as a Parliament over these coming weeks is to examine this deal in detail, to debate it respectfully, to listen to our constituents and decide what is in our national interest.

“There is a choice which MPs will have to make. We can back this deal, deliver on the vote of the referendum and move on to building a brighter future of opportunity and prosperity for all our people.

“Or this House can choose to reject this deal and go back to square one … It would open the door to more division and more uncertainty, with all the risks that will entail.”

She will say that “the national interest is clear” and “the British people want us to get on with a deal that honours the referendum”.

Former foreign secretary Boris Johnson branded the Prime Minister’s deal a “disaster” and a “humiliation” for the UK.

In his regular Daily Telegraph column, he said: “The other EU countries have signed the deal immediately, because they know that they have us exactly where they want us.

“We are a satellite state – a memento mori fixed on the walls of Brussels as a ghastly gaping warning to all who try to escape.”

More than 80 Tories have rejected the deal, with opposition parties – and Mrs May’s allies in the DUP – also set to oppose it.

Writing in the Daily Telegraph, deputy DUP leader Nigel Dodds demanded the Government go back to the negotiating table “rather than waste any more time putting forward false choices”.

“We are heading under this deal for Brexit in name only or the break-up of the United Kingdom,” he warned.

“The tragedy is that it is all so utterly unnecessary.”

Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt insisted Mrs May could carry on as Prime Minister if she was defeated.

“Absolutely she can,” he told BBC1’s The Andrew Marr Show.

Pressed on whether the Government could collapse, he acknowledged: “It’s not possible to rule out anything.”

Mr Corbyn said the deal “is the result of a miserable failure of negotiation that leaves us with the worst of all worlds”.

At a press conference in Brussels, Mrs May refused to be drawn on whether she would stand down if she lost the vote, despite being repeatedly pressed on the subject.

“I am focusing on ensuring that I make a case for this deal to MPs,” she said.