May’s Brexit plan has been dealt a fresh blow as poll shows voters would prefer to have clean break from EU

Twice as many voters want Britain to quit the EU without a deal than back Theresa May’s Brexit plan, a shock Mirror poll has revealed.

An exclusive ComRes survey shows 39% think the Prime Minister “should accept a no deal and the UK simply leave the EU”.

Just 20% believe she should press ahead with her Chequers plans for a soft Brexit.

The results are the latest hammer blow to Mrs May’s EU withdrawal strategy, which triggered the resignations of Brexit Secretary David Davis and Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson.

The chaos has handed Labour a four-point lead over the Tories.

An Opinium/Observer poll had Jeremy Corbyn’s party on 40% with the Conservatives trailing on 36% – a six-point plunge since early June.

Mrs May on Sunday revealed Donald Trump urged her to “sue the EU” as she prepared to negotiate Brexit.

The PM, who watched the men’s final at Wimbledon, told the BBC: “He told me I should sue the EU. Not go into negotiation, sue them.”

Meanwhile, the President disclosed the Queen told him Brexit is “a very complex problem”. Mr Trump told the Mail on Sunday: “She’s right.”

The PM faces further pressure on Monday when the Customs Bill returns to the Commons.

Mr Johnson could break cover by making a resignation speech in the Commons.

The PM will struggle to sell her plan, signed off by the Cabinet at her Chequers country retreat, to the public, according to our poll.

Some 51% of Tory voters want a no-deal Brexit, compared with 26% of Labour supporters.

A quarter of voters, rising to 36% of Labour supporters but just 16% of Tory voters, want her to ask for an extension to the March deadline for a deal.

Lib Dem Layla Moran, of the Best for Britain campaign, claimed: “Quitting with ‘no deal’ would be a catastrophic outcome for our country, but it’s becoming clearer by the day that the public are sick of the indecision and lack of…