British Prime Minister Teresa Mae has survived a vote by the House of Commons to withdraw confidence from her in the wake of the disillusionment with the EU exit agreement.

The result means May will continue to reach out to members of parliament from various parties to try to find consensus on how to move ahead with Britain's exit from the European Union after parliament on Tuesday rejected an agreement it reached.

325 deputies voted against the withdrawal of confidence from the government of May, compared with 306 deputies supported the withdrawal of confidence from them.

Following the announcement of the results of the vote, the British prime minister called on party leaders for talks on BRICEST "immediately."

At the opening of the debate in parliament on the no-confidence motion against May, Labor opposition leader Jeremy Corbin described the government as "dead".

Corbin said the conservative leader had lost "confidence and support" to parliament, the day after the British parliamentarians overwhelmingly rejected the agreement he had made to get out of the European Union.

Corbin called on her to "do what is right and resign" less than three months before the March 29 deadline.

On Wednesday, 432 deputies voted against the Brixett deal against only 202 supporters, in the worst parliamentary defeat a government has ever wanted in Britain's recent history, sparking political turmoil that could lead the country out of the union without order or even out.

As the departure approaches, the United Kingdom is currently under the worst political crisis in half a century as it tries to decide how to get out of the European project it joined in 1973 or even withdraw from the bloc.