LONDON: British Prime Minister Theresa May on Wednesday survived a no-confidence vote sparked by the crushing defeat of her Brexit deal just weeks before the UKinfo-icon leaves the European Unioninfo-icon.

A stunning 24-hour span saw May on Tuesday dealt the heaviest drubbing by parliament in modern British political historyinfo-icon -- 432 votes to 202 -- over the divorce terms she reached with Brussels.

She emerged victorious in parliament's first no-confidence vote in a British government in 26 years on Wednesday by a 325-306 margin, a majority of 19.

But it may have only been a pyrrhic victory for the hobbled but determined premier as she tries to steer the worldinfo-icon's fifth-biggest economyinfo-icon through its biggest crisis in a generation.

The opposition Labour Party could try to oust her government again in the hope of triggering snap electionsinfo-icon before Britaininfo-icon's scheduled March 29 Brexit date.

And May herself is working on the tightest-possible deadline as Britain prepares to leave the bloc that for half a century defined its economic and political relations with the rest of the world.

She has promised to return to parliament on Monday with an alternative Brexit strategy devised through cross-party talks with the opposition.

There is now an assumption among many European diplomats that Brexit will have to be delayed to avoid a potentially catastrophic "no-deal" breakup.