
Theresa May is facing growing calls to say she would delay Brexit rather than leave the EU if no deal is in place by the end of March.
A new plan from moderate Tory MPs says ministers could postpone Brexit until 23 May "to conclude negotiations".
It is being suggested as an alternative to cross-party proposals which would see MPs take control of the process.
The PM will meet EU leaders at a summit in Egypt later, as she presses for more concessions to her deal.
Mrs May announced on Sunday that MPs will get a fresh vote on her deal by 12 March, vowing that leaving as planned 17 days later was "within our grasp".
But many MPs had wanted another so-called "meaningful vote" sooner than that, and Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn suggested Mrs May was "running down the clock" until a time when MPs were forced "to choose between her bad deal and a disastrous no deal".
Mrs May's announcement also provoked disappointment among business leaders, who are clamouring for certainty about what is to come.
On Monday, the PM is due to meet key European figures, including German Chancellor Angela Merkel, on the sidelines of the EU-League of Arab States summit in Sharm-el-Sheikh.
There will then be further talks in Brussels on Tuesday on the Northern Ireland backstop - the number one sticking point for many when it comes to the Brexit deal.
'Strictly time limited'
The prime minister has long resisted any suggestion that the UK's departure could be postponed beyond 29 March.
But political editor Laura Kuenssberg says two cabinet ministers have told the BBC they believe she will this week grant some kind of concession to allow for a possible delay.
Such a move, though, would inevitably anger Brexiteers who want the UK to leave as planned, whatever the cost.
On Wednesday, MPs will get another chance to put forward a range of amendments in the Commons to show what direction they want Brexit to take.
One - drawn up by Labour's Yvette Cooper and Conservative Oliver Letwin - would, if passed give MPs the power to demand a delay to Brexit if a deal cannot be agreed by 13 March.
Three cabinet ministers, Greg Clark, Amber Rudd and David Gauke, signalled they could be prepared to vote for it if there is no breakthrough in the next few days.
Competing with that is a new amendment from moderate Conservative backbenchers, led by Andrew Percy and Simon Hart, which calls for a "strictly time limited" delay to Brexit if there is no formal deal by 13 March.
It would avoid handing control of Brexit to Parliament, and its proposers hope it will attract support from MPs who have indicated they might support the Cooper-Letwin amendment a "last resort" to avoid no-deal, as well as colleagues who are relaxed about no-deal, on the basis that it will provide more time for planning.
Labour is also likely to table an amendment on Wednesday, putting its own Brexit plan - one which backs a permanent customs union with the EU and a close relationship with its single market - to MPs.
That move could take the party a step closer to supporting another EU referendum.
Ready for the cunning wheeze?
It's absolutely plain that Theresa May doesn't want to delay Brexit in any way. An extension, in her view, doesn't solve any of the dilemmas.
But she has also never actually 100% said that she would never, ever, ever end up doing that. Simply, she can't, because Parliament might take the decision out of her hands, or the prospect of a defeat might force her to move.
Indeed, a senior figure in government is convinced that Number 10 will find a way, if the votes are stacking up, of taking leaving without a deal off the table by implication, next week.
They said it would be "difficult to envisage her actually saying it". Theresa May is not about to dance down Downing Street declaring that she would never take us out of the EU without a deal.
But she might try to pre-empt a defeat in Parliament next week that would force her to do just that.
Theresa May is continuing to push Brussels for extra legal promises that the backstop - the controversial policy that aims to prevent a hard border returning to the island of Ireland - would, if ever implemented, be temporary.
However, Irish Foreign Minister Simon Coveney warned on Sunday that the EU would not re-open the withdrawal agreement, adding his government could not be asked to "compromise on something as fundamental as the peace process", on which the border played a key part.
But he told Sky News they would try to "provide reassurance and clarification for the British Parliament to allow them to ratify this deal".