HOVE MP Peter Kyle has urged the Prime Minister to back his Brexit proposal and save her job.

The MP for Hove and Portslade is leading the charge on an amendment which would see a public vote held on Theresa May’s controversial deal.

Peter Kyle says that if the Prime Minister does not agree to his proposal, her premiership will come to a “turbulent and uncontrolled end”.

He said: “What we’ve seen this week is Parliament taking back control and it’s an irony that people who support Brexit don’t like what they see.

“In the next week Theresa May is likely to bring back her deal for a third time.

“I am seeking to amend it with a compromise which would see Brexit taken away from Westminster and brought back to every community in all four countries in our nation.”

The Labour MP’s amendment has already won the support of prominent Remainers in the Tory Party.

If it gets enough support, the Prime Minister’s deal will be put to the country in the form of a referendum.

The UK would stay within the union under the current arrangements if Theresa May’s deal is rejected in the public vote.

Mr Kyle said: “This is the only way I can see the political gridlock being broken and our body politic

offering the country a decisive end to the Brexit withdrawal process they’re craving for.

“I truly believe that if the PM doesn’t grab this lifeline, her premiership will come to a turbulent and uncontrolled end.”

The Labour MP for Brighton Kemptown has made it clear he wants to stop Brexit at all costs.

Lloyd Russell-Moyle, elected in 2017, says that leaving the EU is a “disaster”.

He said: “There’s nothing good about it, nor will there ever be.

“It’s a con. It’s a trick.

“Anyone who’s right and moral needs to stand up and talk about how we stop this disaster which is affecting our country.”

Brighton and Hove and the Lewes district voted to remain in the European Union in the June 23 referendum.

Mr Russell-Moyle said: “In the area I represent, people voted remain and so I must represent those people.

“In a democracy, the losing side makes their arguments over and over until they’re the winner.

“We can’t be frozen in time and take the will of one single vote – that’s tyranny.

“The democratic thing is to take this back to the people.

“There’s not a majority [in Parliament] to move forward with a botched deal.”

The MP for Brighton Pavilion, Caroline Lucas, has been a long-term supporter of a second referendum.

This is where people would vote again on the issue of Brexit.

Some people have suggested this could either be a re-run of the original question or a vote on a potential deal, like Mr Kyle’s.

Ms Lucas said: “This week has seen the political process continue to fail people, and it’s no wonder that so many are looking on in horror.

“But on the positive side, Parliament rejected Theresa May’s deal, rejected the extreme Brexiteers’ disastrous No Deal fantasy, and voted in favour of the only sensible option – extending Article 50.”

Article 50 is the process by which the UK can leave the EU.

When it was triggered on March 29, 2017, it started a two-year countdown in which the UK and EU needed to agree a deal.

Because no deal has been agreed,

the UK is set to ask the EU for an extension.

Ms Lucas said: “We’re now gradually steering away from the cliff edge – but we’ve got to use that time

well, and avoid creating another precipice.

“MPs must end this chaos and put their faith in the public by delivering a People’s Vote.”

European Council president Donald Tusk has indicated that the EU may be ready to offer a lengthy extension to negotiations if the UK wants to “rethink its Brexit strategy and build consensus around it”.

On Wednesday, German Chancellor Angela Merkel refused to say how long she thinks a possible delay to Brexit should be, but said it was in “our mutual interest that we achieve an orderly departure”.

French president Emmanuel Macron said Britain needed a clear reason for requesting an extension and extra time could not be used to renegotiate the withdrawal.

The EU’s chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier said London must decide what it wants from Brexit before Brussels will consider a delay.