Opposition party leaders will meet for further talks in Westminster on Monday in a bid to ensure Boris Johnson cannot push through a no-deal Brexit against the will of Parliament.
The leaders are expected to discuss a plan by Liberal Democrat leader Jo Swinson to force the Prime Minister to go to Brussels to seek another Brexit delay as early as this weekend.
Parliament has already passed the so-called Benn Act requiring him to request a further extension to the Article 50 withdrawal process if he cannot get a new agreement by October 19.
READ MORE: SNP leadership urges opposition parties to 'ramp up' efforts to oust Boris Johnson from Downing St
But some on the opposition side fear that could leave too little time to take action through the courts if Mr Johnson tries to circumvent the legislation and push through a no-deal break.
While he has repeatedly said he will abide by the law, the Prime Minister has also insisted the UK will leave the EU on October 31, come what may.
A Liberal Democrat source confirmed Ms Swinson would be putting forward the idea of bringing forward the deadline for seeking an extension when she meets counterparts from Labour, the SNP, Plaid Cymru and the Greens.
"I expect it to be discussed at the meeting. It is certainly Jo's intention that it should," the source told PA.
Ian Blackford, the SNP leader at Westminster, signalled his support for the Lib Dem plan, saying he would back any measure which prevented Mr Johnson bypassing the Benn Act.
"All of us have got to work together. I'm not precious. Everyone is much more aware of what he is capable of," he told The Daily Telegraph.
"There is no doubt that he will seek to frustrate the legislation in place as we head towards the second half of October."
A Labour source said: "We are looking at all mechanisms and additional legal safeguards to block no-deal and ensure the PM complies with the Benn Act."
The move could see Tory MPs and ministers forced to abandon their party conference in Manchester and dash back to Westminster if the opposition stage an ambush to seize control of the Commons agenda.
Unusually, the Commons is sitting during conference after MPs refused to grant the Government the customary recess in the bitter aftermath of the Supreme Court ruling that Mr Johnson's suspension of Parliament was unlawful.
The latest plan comes after the SNP failed to win support for a tabling no-confidence motion with a view to forming an interim government if they succeeded in toppling Mr Johnson.
Under the proposal, the temporary administration would have sought an extension from the EU and then immediately called a general election.
READ MORE: Jackson Carlaw: Brexit extension would be damaging to Scotland
However the other parties were wary, amid concerns Mr Johnson could have tried to hang on in No 10 and delay an election until after October 31 by which time Britain would be out.
There were also sharp difference between the parties over who would lead such a government.
Jeremy Corbyn has said that, as the leader of the biggest opposition party in the Commons, he should have first crack at forming an administration - a position broadly supported by the SNP.
However Ms Swinson has been adamant that she would not be prepared to put the Labour leader in No 10.
Her view is shared by many of the rebel Tory MPs who lost the whip after rebelling over Brexit and whose votes would be needed if the plan was to succeed.
Some MPs have suggested that a more consensual figure such as Ken Clarke or Dame Margaret Beckett could stand a better chance of uniting the parties.
Other ideas floating around Westminster include tabling another bill to enable Commons Speaker John Bercow to seek an extension from Brussels if Mr Johnson refuses to do so.
In a letter to The Times, published on Monday, MPs from the Liberal Democrat, Labour and Conservative parties, along with an independent, decried the behaviour seen in House of Commons debates last week.
Liberal Democrat MP Luciana Berger, Conservative Paul Masterton, Rosie Duffield from the Labour Party and Stephen Lloyd, a former Lib Dem who now sits as an independent, said they felt "sickened" by what happened in parliament.
"MPs screaming at each other across the floor; a prime minister dismissing fears of violence; and MPs fighting back tears sharing stories about vitriolic abuse they and their families have faced.
"Our political system foments this frenzy, entrenching and encouraging overly tribal and partisan behaviour, which threatens our ability to work together," they wrote.
Meanwhile, ministers insist they can still get an agreement with the EU which would allow Britain to leave on October 31 with a deal - despite the gloomy noises that have been coming out of Brussels.
Diplomats in the Belgian capital have said they expect the British side finally to table its proposals for resolving the issue of the Northern Ireland backstop once the Tory conference finishes on Wednesday.
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