The members of the British Tory Party have received the strictest orders to appear in Parliament on Monday.

It is likely to be ready to vote through a new version of the "Northern Ireland Agreement".

Government sources tell the BBC that the negotiations are "positive" and Ireland's Prime Minister Leo Varadkar says a solution is "just inches away".

The agreement has caused a government crisis

The trade agreement that regulates the transport of goods between the EU country of Ireland and British Northern Ireland was written after Brexit and has since been a source of increased tensions between the countries.

The EU requires strict border controls on goods brought into the Union, but when it was worried that stricter border controls between Ireland and Northern Ireland could lead to unrest and risk the peace between the countries, the border controls between Great Britain and the island of Ireland have been carried out instead.

It has subsequently caused a government crisis in Northern Ireland as the second largest party, the Democratic Union Party, the DUP, felt that that solution had undermined Northern Ireland's place in the UK.

Could be a new "Windsor Agreement"

Now the parties seem to be close to a breakthrough to resolve the situation.

Varadkar said on Saturday that it was possible that a new deal would be in place within the next few days.

With the new agreement, which is said to be called the "Windsor Agreement" according to the BBC, the British want the transports to be split into two separate files.

One for goods to Northern Ireland that do not need to be checked.

And one for goods to Ireland which are controlled.

Much of the pressure to resolve the issue comes from conservatives and Northern Irish unionists.

Jeffrey Donaldson, party leader of the DUP is in no rush and said over the weekend that the important thing is to get it right rather than fast.

- If it is the wrong agreement, the distribution of power will not be restored, then the division will be deepened for future generations, says Jeffrey Donaldson, party leader for Northern Ireland's DUP.