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U.K. government, opposition hold 'detailed and productive' Brexit talks

British Prime Minister Theresa May's negotiating team met with the Opposition Labour Party for four and a half hours of "detailed and productive technical talks" on Brexit, and will reconvene Friday to try to find a way out of the stalemate.

Conservatives, Labour both face internal dissent over cross-party talks

Theresa May's and Jeremy Corbyn's negotiating teams met for four and a half hours of what Downing Street called 'detailed and productive technical talks' on Brexit on Thursday. (Tolga Akmen/AFP/Getty Images)

British Prime Minister Theresa May's negotiating team will meet the Opposition Labour Party for further talks on Friday to try to find a way out of the Brexit stalemate, Downing Street said.

A spokesperson for May's office said both sets of negotiating teams met for four and a half hours of "detailed and productive technical talks." May is looking to find a solution that the Labour Party can support ahead of a European Council summit on April 10.

"The government and the opposition hope to meet again tomorrow for further work to find a way forward to deliver on the referendum, mindful of the need to make progress ahead of the forthcoming European Council," the Downing Street spokesperson said.

May faced fury from anti-European Union Conservatives after she agreed to talks with Labour Party Leader Jeremy Corbyn, who favours a softer form of Brexit than that advocated by the government. Two junior ministers have resigned, and more could follow.

May and Corbyn met for two hours Wednesday, with both sides calling the talks "constructive." The cross-party talks are risky for both the Conservatives and Labour, with each party split down the middle over Brexit.

'There is going to be pain on both sides'

Labour is formally committed to enacting the voters' decision to leave the EU, but many of the party's lawmakers want a new referendum that could keep Britain in the bloc. They will be angry if the party actively helps bring about the U.K.'s departure.

Pro-Brexit Conservatives are angry at the prospect of a softer Brexit that keeps Britian bound closely to EU trade rules and standards.

Treasury chief Philip Hammond said both parties needed to be flexible to break the Brexit impasse.

"When you enter into a negotiation like this to find a compromise way forward, both parties have to give something up," he told ITV television. "There is going to be pain on both sides."

Next deadline April 12

Britain's political paralysis over Brexit has left the country facing a possible cliff-edge departure from the EU in just over a week.

After U.K. lawmakers three times rejected an agreement struck between the bloc and May late last year, the EU gave Britain until April 12 to approve a withdrawal agreement, change course and seek a further delay to Brexit, or crash out of the bloc with no deal to cushion the shock.

Corbyn leaves his home in north London on Thursday. There are further crisis talks today. (Tolga Akmen/AFP/Getty Images)

Economists and business leaders warn that a no-deal Brexit would cause huge disruption to trade and travel, with tariffs and customs checks causing gridlock at British ports and possible shortages of goods.

Lawmakers desperate to avoid a chaotic exit have seized control of the parliamentary agenda to pass a hastily drafted bill that compels May to ask for an extension to the Brexit deadline if a no-deal departure is looming.

'Rain stops play' in the House

Earlier on Thursday, all activity in the House of Commons was suspended after water began pouring through a ceiling into the chamber below.

Lawmakers, who were debating tax policy, were ordered out of the chamber as a torrent cascaded onto the press gallery, where journalists sit to watch Commons business.

"I hope I can complete my speech before rain stops play. I think there is probably some kind of symbol, about how many people view how broken parliament is, going on there," Labour MP Justin Madders said in the lower chamber.

Experts have warned for years that the Parliament building, one of London's most famous landmarks, needs urgent repairs. Pipes frequently burst, brickwork is crumbling and the building is riddled with asbestos.

The upper chamber, the House of Lords, continued to debate Brexit in a separate part of the building.

'A total farce,' Brexiteer says

The bill was approved by the House of Commons late Wednesday by a single vote, and was being debated Thursday in Parliament's upper chamber, the House of Lords.

Pro-Brexit lawmakers condemned the bill as an attempt to frustrate Brexit.

Conservative Brexiteer Peter Bone said Wednesday's vote in the House of Commons "was a total farce and it was an abuse of Parliament."

Anti-EU members of the House of Lords were expected to filibuster and use other delaying tactics to try to impede the progress of the bill through the upper chamber.

EU exasperated by London chaos

Dianne Hayter, Labour's Brexit spokesperson in the Lords, said she was willing to debate all day and night if need be to get it through.

An anti-Brexit protester demonstrates outside the Houses of Parliament in London on Thursday. (Hannah Mckay/Reuters)

"If that's what it takes to do what the elected House of Commons asked us to do, that is what we will do," she said.

If the bill passes into law, May will have to go to a special EU Brexit summit in Brussels on April 10 to seek a delay.

The EU is not compelled to agree. Leaders of the bloc, exasperated by the chaos in London, say they will only grant a delay to Brexit if Britain comes up with a workable new plan.

Irish economy, Northern Ireland peace process at risk

French President Emmanuel Macron, one of the leaders most resistant to a further Brexit extension, has warned that the bloc can't be held "hostage" to Britain's crisis.

European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker said Wednesday that "a 'no-deal' on 12 April at midnight looks more and more likely."

Worries about a no-deal Brexit are especially acute in Ireland, the only EU member state to share a land border with the U.K. Any customs checks or other obstacles along the currently invisible frontier would hammer the Irish economy, and could undermine Northern Ireland's peace process.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel was visiting Dublin Thursday for Brexit talks with Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar.

With passions running high both inside and outside Parliament, police warned politicians to tone down their rhetoric.

Martin Hewitt, chair of the National Police Chiefs' Council, said the mood was "incredibly febrile."

"But I think there is a responsibility on those individuals that have a platform and have a voice, to communicate in a way that is temperate and is not in any way going to inflame people's views," he said.