But what it suggests is that despite widespread frustration on all sides, Jeremy Corbyn is so far stopping short of taking a real shot at toppling May's administration, and is unlikely to do so unless, and until, he thinks he can win.For her part, Theresa May is unlikely to budge on her plan, unless and until she is forced to do so. To the immense irritation of both their supporters and their rivals, even though the Brexit clock is running down, neither of the main party leaders are willing to take the kind of radical move that might unblock the gridlock. I am pleased that motion will be debated tomorrow so this House can give its verdict on the sheer incompetence of this government and pass that motion of no confidence in this government. One of them, Steve Baker, said: "Eurosceptic Conservatives are clear that we accept the democratic decision of our party to have confidence in Theresa May as PM. "But Mr Corbyn told reporters late on Monday: "We haven't failed to trigger any process. I therefore Mr Speaker, inform you, that I have tabled a motion of no confidence in this government. (Dan Kitwood/Getty Images/via JTA)The leader of Britain’s opposition Labour party Jeremy Corbyn makes a speech on stage during a rally, as people gathered at Whitehall in London to demonstrate against the state visit of US President Donald Trump, June 4, 2019. I don't blame if you if it all seems like procedural nonsense. A "trade-off" may be needed in England amid a rise in cases, a scientist advising the government says. These are external links and will open in a new windowJeremy Corbyn has tabled a motion of no confidence in Theresa May, after she said MPs would not vote on her Brexit deal until the week of 14 January.The PM had delayed the vote from last week, admitting she was set to lose.Labour leader Mr Corbyn said on Monday it was unacceptable for MPs to wait a month to vote, adding the PM had led the UK into a "national crisis".But No 10 sources told the BBC the government would not make time for the no-confidence vote.Ministers would not "go along with silly political games", they added.Mr Corbyn tabled the motion calling on MPs to declare they have "no confidence in the prime minister due to her failure to allow the House of Commons to have a meaningful vote straightaway" on the Brexit deal.The motion focuses on Mrs May personally, rather than the government.BBC political editor Laura Kuenssberg said the motion could have been embarrassing for Mrs May, but as things stood, ministers would not allow time for it to be debated.She said No 10 had effectively "batted the ball back to Labour to see if they have the guts" to call for a vote of no confidence in the government as a whole.Unlike a vote targeting the PM, a motion of no confidence in the government could bring about an early general election if it is supported by a majority of MPs.The SNP, the Lib Dems, Plaid Cymru and the Greens have tried to force Labour to bring about that situation, by trying to amend Mr Corbyn's motion.But Mr Corbyn said his aim in tabling the motion was to put pressure on her to have a vote on her Brexit deal this week. And frankly, you might not be completely wrong. Ellman’s no confidence debate comes just days after a local London party branch decided Dame Margaret Hodge, a veteran Jewish lawmaker in the Labour Party who last year called Corbyn an … The party’s parliamentarians voted 172 to 40 against Mr Corbyn’s leadership in a … "Mrs May appeared to have the support of pro-Brexit backbench critics who last week failed in a bid to oust her as Tory leader. "The deal is unchanged and is not going to change," he said. It cites Ellman’s statement last month that she “understands why Jews would seriously consider leaving Britain if Corbyn became PM.” The move comes after frontbencher Baroness Hayter was fired for comparing the “bunker mentality” around Corbyn’s leadership to the “last days of Hitler”. Mrs May told MPs: "It is now only just over 14 weeks until the UK leaves the EU and I know many members of this House are concerned that we need to take a decision soon." My priority remains serving the people of Barking as I have done for the last 25 years,” Hodge Reselection allows parties to replace MPs by opening the door for other party members to run for the seat in a primary election. Board of Deputies President Marie van der Zyl responded to the motion, telling the newspaper: “That a Jewish MP should be threatened with a vote of no confidence tabled for Yom Kippur – the holiest day in the Jewish calendar when she has no opportunity even to respond – ought to be a source of deep shame for the Labour Party.” ... "Labour tabling a motion … The Jewish Labour Movement has passed a motion of no confidence in Jeremy Corbyn over the party's handling of antisemitism complaints.