No indication the government's in jeopardy over the vote... but that could changepublished at 15:50 BST
Harry Farley
Political correspondent
A handful of Labour MPs have indicated they will either vote in favour of the prime minister facing an inquiry, or they will abstain.
But so far - and I should stress this could change - there is not an indication the government is in jeopardy. Partly because the numbers of dissenters are small and partly because they all come from the left of the party, not from where the majority of Labour MPs sit.
I'm reminded of the debate in February that kicked much of this process off. That was on publishing the documents relating to Peter Mandelson's appointment as the UK's ambassador to the US.
The government began that day telling its MPs to vote against the Conservatives' motion. But that unravelled, prompted largely by an intervention by former Deputy PM Angela Rayner in the House of Commons, and Labour whips had to rapidly change their position.
The government will be breathing a sigh of relief that - for now - there has not been an equivalent 'Rayner moment' that suggests the dissent extends more widely than a small number of regular rebels.












